This is Adams’ greatest critique of modern life. We are obsessed with data, with metrics, with the "answer" (GDP, IQ, Twitter followers). But we have forgotten to ask the right questions. The book suggests that maybe the question is "What do you get when you multiply six by nine?" (Which, in base 13, actually works out to 42... but Adams always claimed that was a coincidence.)
Have you ever read The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy? What’s your favorite moment—the whale and the petunia, the mice running the show, or the restaurant at the end of the universe? Drop your thoughts (and your towel status) in the comments below! Guia-Autoestopista-Galactico
Everyone panics. That’s it? That’s the secret? This is Adams’ greatest critique of modern life
First published as a radio drama in 1978 (before becoming a book, TV series, computer game, and film), this "trilogy in five parts" has become more than just a cult classic. It is a mindset. It is a towel. The book suggests that maybe the question is
Adams argues that the only rational response to existential terror is a kind of cheerful, stubborn stoicism. You don't need to understand the universe. You just need to know where your towel is. (A towel, the Guide notes, is the most useful item an interstellar hitchhiker can have—for warmth, for navigation, for first aid, and for avoiding the gaze of the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal.)
Arthur’s house? Not important. The planet? A bureaucratic inconvenience.
On the surface, it’s a joke. But dig deeper. The universe is two trillion galaxies large, most of it is empty, and humanity is a "mostly harmless" species living on a planet that was an experimental computer designed by hyper-intelligent pan-dimensional beings (who were, incidentally, mice).