The hoopiest frood of them all. (1952-2001)
"He's just this guy, y'know?"
TV Tropes.org has this to say about Douglas Noel Adams...A British humorist and
science fiction writer, most renowned for having written
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy "trilogy", the
Dirk Gently series, and several
Doctor Who stories starring the one and only
Tom Baker.
A really hoopy frood, he was really fond of deadlines (
he liked the whooshing sound they made as they flew by) and always knew where his towel was.
* Actually, he didn't. That was where the joke came from: he could never, ever find his towel, and figured that it was probably symptomatic of the general disorganization of his whole life. Anyone who actually knew where their towel was, he reasoned, would have to be a really together person.
His interests included evolutionary biology, software technology, Apple computers, the music of
Pink Floyd, Bach, and
The Beatles, and SCUBA diving. He was involved in a BBC radio production (and then book) with Mark Carwardine called
Last Chance To See, where he made his case for the necessity of biodiversity and the need for conservation initiatives. He also considered himself a radical
atheist, but the "radical" bit was just to show people that he was serious about it (as opposed to merely being agnostic), not because he was intolerant or aggressive. If ever a human being was
Too Cool to Live and
Too Good to Last, it was him.
Hitchhiker was constructed in a typically Adams fashion — he was notorious for cribbing from his own previous works, and a good many aspects of
Hitchhiker had been put to paper in some form (mostly Adams' own plays and unpublished short stories) before the series itself was conceived.
Douglas Adams died of a massive heart attack in a gym in Santa Barbara, California — where he had a home — on May 11, 2001. Because of where he was at the time, Adams actually
was carrying a towel when he died. Many of his fans find this to be
very bittersweet.
Adams has been honored with an asteroid, named in his honor (25924 Douglasadams); the asteroid's prior designation (2001 DA42) is notable in that it coincidentally carries the year of Adams' passing; his initials; and the Answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything. Adams would quite probably see such a coincidence as solid proof that the universe has a sense of humor.
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