Rating: Summary: As great as everything else Douglas has written. But still.. Review: This is a review of the Restaurant At The End Of The Universe (AUDIO CD rendition).The Book is fantastic! Totally hilarious. A welcome sequel to any first-time reader of HGTG. The CD set consists of five (5) CDs, and the story is read by Douglas Adams (the author) himself. For anyone not familiar with the voice of DA, his reading, inflections, and ease in switching voices during dialog passages adds greatly to the presentation. The CD does have some 'electronically-modified' voices (Marvin & the ship's computer, for instance), but they're all Douglas Adams, and he makes it quite difficult not to laugh out loud while listening. It's also pretty hard not to consume the whole book at one sitting. My two complaints on this media presentation are that it is simply a straight transfer to CD of Douglas Adams' CASSETTE-TAPE recordings. They didnt even remove all of the 'End of Side' notations from the original. Imagine that you're listening to the story, and in the *middle* of a disc, you hear Douglas say "End of side TWO". Then the story continues. I also have to mention my biggest beef with this presentation (as with ALL of the CD renditions) which is that each disc is comprised of only ONE track! You cannot jump forward or backward by chapters. If you cannot listen to an entire disc at one sitting (about an hour), then you cannot resume midway if you happen to stop the disc. In this regard, the cassette-tapes excel over the CD renditions. Considering that Douglas was pretty-much a techno-hound, I think he'd be pretty disgusted that his works were being stamped-out in such a shoddy fashion. All-in-all, the book is as good as, if not better than, the HITCHHIKERS GUIDE. Adams fanatics will love it. It's a book that demonstrates that DA was an accomplished wordsmith, and that he spent considerable time and effort to add hundreds of subtle cross-references between passages that cannot be caught at first reading (listening). In this regard, you'll find something new each time you consume this book.
Rating: Summary: This CD is a Hack Review: This is not a review of the material from the book or the author performance of it. Those are great. The makers of this cd should be condemed. Not only are there no chapters, making it one long track on each disc, but there is a spot a few minutes into disc two where some audio is left from the tape version. It says "end of side two." They made Hitchhikers discs with many tracks, did they become lazy. . . or cheap. . . or both. Damn irritating.
Rating: Summary: Great Story but a Step Down From the 1st in the "Trilogy" Review: When I was in elementary school, this was a common series read by the male nerds and geeks in my school. After reading it, I can now see how much it shaped their speech patterns and writing styles. I found myself smiling as clouds of nostalgia unexpectedly overtook me while reading the series. I was also surprised to find phrases original to this series that have worked their way into the American culture. For example, in order to understand people who speak other languages, the characters in this series simply put a "Babelfish" in their ear. In real life, Babel Fish is a language translation program available on the internet. Since the book it appears in was published in 1979, there's no question of which came first. In THE HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY, we found out that the earth was actually created as an organic supercomputer with the sole purpose of determining the answer to life, the universe and everything. Arthur Dent finds himself whisked away from the earth only moments before the earth is destroyed to make way for a intergalactic bypass highway. Unfortunately, this is right before the earth was to have computed the answer to the question. He and Ford (an alien that has been marooned on earth) hitch a ride on the unsuspecting spacecraft that has just caused the destruction of the earth. They continue their hitchhiking journey throughout the galaxy to a ship called the Heart of Gold (which is actually a stolen vehicle). There, they meet with a series of unlikely coincidences thanks to the ship's Infinite Improbability Drive. THE RESTAURANT AT THE END OF THE UNIVERSE The HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY ends as the Heart of Gold heads for a bite to eat at the Restaurant at the End of the Universe. Evidently this restaurant must be reached by traveling forward in time to the actual end of the universe. Every night, a big show is made of the big bang that ends the universe. Luckily, the restaurant is protected from the effects and can make a show of it night after night. The only disappointing thing is that Author Dent and his friends miss the show as they attempt to stow away and hitchhike yet another ride in entirely the wrong vehicle. To make a long story short, Arthur and Ford end up marooned on prehistoric earth with a bunch of cave men and some amazingly stupid people who have been exiled from their own planet. Could these idiotic hairdressers and phone sanitizers be our true ancestors? In this book, we also meet the man in charge of the universe. Strangely enough, he is a forgetful old hermit who spends most of his time in his shack talking to his cat and his table or pondering the use of a pencil. This series is bizarre comic sarcasm at its best. A smile automatically paints itself on your face as you begin to read. The series reads like a highly improbable dream sequence. I sort of wonder if the author had any conclusion in mind when he wrote it or if he just let the story write itself (not unlike a dream). This, the second book in the "trilogy" isn't quite as fast-paced in the beginning, but things do pick up toward the end.
Rating: Summary: End of the Universe Falls Short Review: While this second book in the hitchhiker series is amusingly satirical, The Restaurant at the End of the Universe falls short of laugh-out-loud funny. Some lines will have you smiling at society's stupidity and your own conformity to it, but the overall feeling of the book is simply sci-fi run amuck. I admit that the themes that run throughout the series are intriguing, but the effort it takes to sort through the layers of insanity makes the read almost unworth it. If you have nothing to do, pick up a copy, but don't plan on joining the hitchhiker cult any time soon.
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