Oh wow! I didn’t know about your sister’s dog and the scrambled eggs! It’s all falling into place now!
No, it’s just something that bothered me the first time I read it, and every few years it pops up again. Don’t remember what brought it up this time…maybe the new Thor movie coming out. So I read back over a few relevant passages, do a few web searches…kind of like an old jigsaw puzzle I like the feel of pieces of, so I push 'em around for a while, see what answers time, other reading, web sites coming and going and SEO might have stirred up.
That’s where my last post came from…just a combination of search terms that also showed up on a site totally unrelated to the book, that also had some other interesting parallels beyond the words searched for. Playing around with a little Dirk Gently-style detecting to try to knock my thoughts out of the groove, see what it might lead to.
Just seems there was some mysterious stuff going on with the ending, hooked into my “man’s search for meaning in the universe”. The idea that it’s not a puzzle, or maybe a broken puzzle, just another by-product of an imperfect universe is fine too. Just a lens I use to look at the story, I guess.
(ran across a part in Salmon of Doubt mentioning how DA had once made huge point about there being exactly one banana on each plate at the beginning of a story, wouldn’t say why, said it would be revealed in the ending. When it wasn’t and they asked him about it, not only had he forgotten what the significance was supposed to be, he’d forgotten he’d put it in there.)
How about this, another question about how the book ends: Thor turns the eagle back into a jet, which roars out of Dirk’s house and kills the yuppies in their car. Just a total coincidence of timing for them to be exactly in front of his door on a deserted street? Thor seems totally oblivious to it, not connecting the sound and light from the explosion to what he’s just done.
Shortly before, Mr. Draycott had offered Dirk anything he wanted to make the problem go away, and Dirk had said he only wanted “just to see you dead.” Did Draycott somehow unwittingly grant Dirk his wish? Was it somehow caused by Odin, or the Guilt God? The fundamental interconnectedness of all things? Thrown in as a slightly implausible way for the bad guys to get their comeuppance without any of the good guys getting blood on their hands?
Partly just interested in the writing process too, where the ideas came from. They mentioned that when he was writing the first HHG series, all the jokes were about not having any money, and hanging around in pubs. After that was a success, the 2nd series was jokes about accountants and eating in fancy restaurants. Teatime of the Soul touches on themes of yuppie lawyers and advertising execs screwing people with contracts, homelessness, the role of gods in a world that doesn’t believe in them anymore, themes that DA had a lot of interest in.
As far as counting the stones go, in talking about evolution, he said “The connection lies in the counter-intuitive observation that complex results arise form simple causes, iterated many times over.” (with a mistake being made being similar to a mutation)
And as for my attitude towards all this, and to some degree why I’m doing it, a couple of other passages I ran across in Salmon of Doubt say it pretty well:
DA Talking about man creating artificial gods, saying even if they don’t exist, “when we create one and and then allow ourselves to behave as if there was one, all sorts of things happen that otherwise wouldn’t happen.” and
“He felt calm, he felt good, he felt able to meet with the wild, thrashing improbabilities that lie an atom’s depth beneath the surface of the narrated world, and to speak their language.”
I’m just looking for the hidden box of Hamdingers to get me off this ride, and trying to enjoy it in the meantime. Whaddaya think, sirs?