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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Worthwhile Effort, 20 Jan 2004
I'm not actually that big a Douglas Adams fan. Of course, the radio series are truly inspired, but, after that, there is, for the most part, a definite feeling about Adams's life of anti-climax and missed opportunity. Nevertheless, I find his life endlessly fascinating, in part, I think, because it's the kind of lfe I wish I had lived (minus, of course, the dropping dead of a massive MI at 49 aspect).Simo has certainly done his research, which is exactly what a biographer should do (Nick Webb please take note). He debunks many of Adams's tall tales. For instance, it is now clear that there was no field in Innsbruck. His lack of access to Adams's family and private papers is a pity, particularly given how little Nick Webb managed to do with it. Because of this, there is no doubt that the definitive biography of Adams still remains to be written. Indeed, Simo doesn't repeat material from Neil Gaiman's "Don't Panic", fairly much compelling one to view the two books as parts of a single work. Simo isn't as good a writer as Gaiman, but that's hardly a crime. The prose is workman-like enough. For me, the book's one great lack is a chronology. I would have liked a table showing exactly what Adams was doing and when. OK, OK, that might be a little obsessive, but there you go. Also, Simo doesn't attempt a critical analysis of Adams's work. This can be found in his Pocket Essentials work on Hitchhiker. Nevertheless, for anyone who is interested in Douglas Adams or indeed the worlds of British comedy and media from the 1970s, this is a more than worthwhile read. I do hope that Simo eventually gets the chance to produce a second edition that incorporates material from Adams's personal archives and also contains more critical material plus, of course, details of the fascinating afterlife of Adams's creations.
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