T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
565.1 | "Dirk 2, the Sequel..." | UCOUNT::BAILEY | Corporate Sleuth | Thu Jan 21 1988 08:50 | 7 |
| I'm pretty sure I read a week or two ago that Adams was quoted as
saying something about a sequel to Dirk Gently in the works which
would be the concluding story in his two-book "trilogy". (He said
he felt he should write a two-book trilogy to balance his earlier
four-book trilogy...and that quote is what makes me remember the
incident at all!) Don't think it said the expected release date,
though. I take it Dirk is worth reading???
|
565.2 | | LIBRAE::BAILEY | Positive followed by negative comments | Thu Oct 13 1988 12:57 | 3 |
| Sequal.... (Well its a Dirk G novel)
The Long Dark Tea time of the Soul
|
565.3 | That'll be $5000 for the reply | MERIDN::BARRETT | Keith Barrett HTF | Mon Mar 20 1989 21:23 | 3 |
| Yes, the book DON'T PANIC mentions that he intends to "deleve" into
that series now and then.
|
565.4 | Not impressed... | CURRNT::PREECE | Are You Now, Or Have you Ever ? | Mon Oct 02 1989 08:20 | 16 |
|
I wasn't overly impressed with DGHDA, I must admit. Seems to
consist largely of Mr. A namedropping a few bits of technology that
could *just* be the sort of expensive toy he's surrounding himself
with, then showing off his literary education.
After all, you have to know the story behind the writing of the
"Ancient Mariner" to appreciate a number of the jokes.
One shining pearl, though.... the piece of software that works
decisions backwards, and gives you an ironclad excuse for the decision
you'd already reached !
Comments ?
Ian
|
565.5 | | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | Ubar of the road... | Mon Oct 02 1989 12:49 | 7 |
|
Tea time is the sequal? I've seen it, but didn't
realize it. Besides, DGHDA was *BORING*
Yawn........zzzzzz
|
565.6 | on 'n on 'n on... | CURRNT::PREECE | I don't know why, I call him Gerald. | Tue Oct 10 1989 09:27 | 9 |
|
Tea-time is *sort of* the sequel. That is, it's got one or tow
of the same people in it, and a couple of throw-back references
to HHG and other books.
You get to find out what Thor does between visiting "disreputable
parties" in flying buildings, and re-read Mr. A's opinions on people
who live in Islington.
Hummmm...
|
565.7 | MHO | NEEPS::IRVINE | Bob Irvine @EDA | Thu Oct 12 1989 09:29 | 8 |
| I recently received "Tea time of the" as a present in hard back,
and was kinda obliged to read it. Although definately not up to
Hitch hiker's type of quality, I got through it with the occasional
giggle. I would not recommend buying this in hardback but if you
can find it cheap in paper back, it would occupy the mind on a flight
over two hours...
Bob
|
565.8 | IMHO | MAKITA::CICCONE | | Wed Dec 13 1989 12:32 | 18 |
| I agree that the two Dirk Gently books have not a good as HHG. The
first couple of Hitchhicker books had me in stitches. But there
were good bits in it. I thought they were harder to read because
they are different than the HHG books. I think Adams is trying not
to go stale by doing something different. He's "stretching".
But they are worth reading! I read them twice, and found them more
enjoyable the second time around. You can see how Adams weaves all
the different elements of his story together. And the endings make
more sense.
Adams has the greatest sentence structures I've ever seen! He's
like a writing acrobat! Reread DG's musings about the lurking
refrigerator.
Looking forward to #3.
Domenic
|
565.9 | IM HumbleO | BREW11::MASSARI | Ship-wrecked and Comatose | Wed Jan 17 1990 12:09 | 7 |
| I also agree that the DG books are not as good as HHGTTG but some
bits had me in absolute stitches.... especially in the context of
electric monks and lurking refrigerators....
A tird reading further improves one's viewpoint ....
Tahi
|
565.10 | Douglas Adams speech videotape at ZKO1 on April 20 | VERGA::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Fri Apr 17 1992 14:15 | 41 |
| From: VAXUUM::EBIT_NEWS "17-Apr-1992 1254" 17-APR-1992 13:09:46.33
To: @EBIT
CC: EBIT_NEWS
Subj: Ebit Number 359, - REMINDER! - Douglas Adams ITCC Keynote Address in
Babbage, April 20
From: JARETH::KANE "Suzy Kane, 381-0624, M/S ZKO3-4/U08 10-Apr-1992 1129"
Date: April 20
Time: 11:45-1:00
Place: Babbage Auditorium (ZKO1)
Videotape of the 1991 ITCC Keynote Address by Douglas Adams
-----------------------------------------------------------
Douglas Adams is author of "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the
Galaxy" and several other books, and author and narrator of
several BBC science documentaries. One reviewer called his
address "brilliant, very funny, and disturbing."
In his address, he describes our species' reliance on sight
as the primary source of our version of reality, in contrast
to other species' reliance on other senses. In discussing
evolution, he said it is the nature of human beings to respond to
immediate threats and not to notice changes that occur over
longer periods of time. This is his explanation of why it
has taken us, as a species, so long to recognize the
destruction that we have wrought on the environment. Adams
believes that with the computers presently available and those
soon to be come, and the emergence of artificial reality as a
credible technology, we have the tools to address our major
environmental problems.
This videotape showing is arranged and presented by the
Northern New England chapter of the Society for Technical
Communication (NNE STC). Douglas Adams keynote speech was
made on April 15, 1991, at the STC's International Technical
Communication Conference in New York City.
|
565.11 | | TECRUS::REDFORD | If this's the future I want vanilla | Fri Apr 17 1992 22:51 | 9 |
| Hey, I'd buy the premise that if we had a better sense of smell
we never would have had the Industrial Revolution. For that
matter, we might never have done anything with fire. Smoke
smells terrible after all.
I remember one story where someone
discovers a cure for the common cold, and thus makes city living
impossible. The cold virus is what enables us to live in groups.
Anybody remember the title and author? /jlr
|
565.12 | Telempath | SALEM::COLETTI | | Mon Apr 20 1992 13:39 | 6 |
| Re: .11
I think the story is 'Telempath' by Spider Robinson. What the 'cure'
did was enhance people's sense of smell so greatly that they could
barely stand one another's smell, much less that of such things as
internal combustion engines. Quite a good read if you can find it.
|
565.13 | | NEWOA::BAILEY | I promise, R = S | Mon Aug 10 1992 13:38 | 7 |
|
FTW in this sundays papers it said that "Mostly Harmless" was
to be released "later this year"
|
565.14 | follow up to Dirk Gently or HHGTTG? | SIOG::S_FARREN | Pan Galactic Gargle Blaster anyone?! | Mon Aug 17 1992 06:19 | 7 |
| Regarding .13
The book "Mostly Harmless", is this a third Dirk Gently book or
possibly a follow up to the Hitch Hiker series as the term "mostly
harmless" was used to discribe the planet earth in the HHGTTG???
Sean.
|
565.15 | No. 5 | BAHTAT::LECTER::SUMMERFIELD | This is daft | Mon Aug 17 1992 06:24 | 4 |
| If I remember rightly, "Mostly Harmless" is the fifth book in the Hitch
Hikers Guide to the Galaxy trilogy.
Clive
|
565.16 | | AUSSIE::GARSON | Hotel Garson: No Vacancies | Wed Apr 06 1994 23:51 | 3 |
| re .11,.12
Could be 'The Coffin Cure' by Alan E. Nourse.
|