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The spine of Hitchhiker’s Guide

See also: Mini-essays on chapters 1-2 and chapters 3-4. In The Creative Habit, Twyla Tharp talks about the “spine” of a work — not the inspiration, which could be a story or image that sparked the initial idea, and not the theme. But the underlying story you started out wanting to tell, no matter how …

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Hitchhiker’s Guide, chapters 3 and 4

Here’s my mini-essay on the first two chapters. Chapter 3 starts with the Vogon ships gliding unnoticed toward Earth, zoomed way out into space. “On this particular Thursday, something was moving quietly through the ionosphere many miles above the surface of the planet; several somethings in fact, several dozen huge yellow chunky slablike somethings, huge …

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Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, chapters 1 and 2

In which I spend 14 or so days reading sections of one of my all-time favorite books, Douglas Adams’ The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, and trying to understand how he wrote it. Nothing about Arthur is actually funny or appealing, which I imagine is intentional. There’s so much weirdness around that Arthur’s slight resistance …

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