Well and carefully recorded, because there are many varying anecdotes, this bio of Douglas Adams brings home a lot of good about the man. Also, to me what came across, was that Adams had a couple of good ideas in his life and went about using them over and over, from performing days at Cambridge with The Footlights to the same ideas being shoehorned in to a first or fifth novel. His idols were all male, Python and the Beatles and so on, and he later met many of them and worked with several.
Other than the first two Hitchhiker books, drawn from a collaboration radio script, I didn't enjoy anything by Adams, except Last Chance To See, written with Mark Carwardine. Nor did he produce many books, just nine, and some of those dashed off in a few weeks after he had spent the million pound advance and his publishers were making a sequence of final demands. He didn't like writing. He just liked having ideas. That shows.
We're told of enormous and lavish parties; we are not reading a word about any odd substances that may or may not have been present at any time. Except alcohol, of which there was a muchness. This is probably tact and a need to avoid legal consequences, but given the times, somebody may have brought something somewhere. Adams, who denied himself sleep for days to get work written after ignoring the need to start for months, died aged only 49. His work in progress was a computer game being developed by a firm that ran out of funds and was bought by the BBC; and the hope of a film being made of his first book. Which was eventually made after a common sense move added an obvious romance to the plot. The whole atmosphere around Adams seemed to be blokey and he admitted to not understanding women, which would be why almost all his characters are male.
I recommend the contrasting auto bio of Michael Caine's, Blow The Bloody Doors Off. That is a much better way to succeed. Rather than the world's largest collection of left handed guitars, or every Apple computer as they were issued, Caine bought his mother a house from the proceeds of a film. He showed up for work and worked for the show.
The notes at the end of Hitchhiker are a textbook example of careful recording of conversations, correspondence, and published content. Photos are included, mostly from early days.
I borrowed this book from the RDS Library. This is an unbiased review.