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Douglas adams biography neil gaiman death

          In , after Adams' untimely death, Gaiman wrote an introduction for MJ Simpson's Hitchhiker: A Biography of Douglas Adams, a lovely.

          I learned that Douglas had died the morning after it happened, in May , from the Internet (which had not existed in )..

          Remembering Douglas

          I met Douglas Adams toward the end of I had been asked to interview him for Penthouse.

          I was expecting someone sharp and smart and BBCish, someone who would sound like the voice of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. I was met at the door to his Islington flat by a very tall man, with a big smile and a big, slightly crooked, nose, all gawky and coltish, as if, despite his size, he was still growing.

          Paying tribute to his genius at the annual Douglas Adams lecture, writer explains how meeting the Hitchhiker's Guide author at 22 changed his life.

        1. Paying tribute to his genius at the annual Douglas Adams lecture, writer explains how meeting the Hitchhiker's Guide author at 22 changed his life.
        2. Acclaimed author Neil Gaiman celebrates the life of Douglas Adams who, in a field in Innsbruck in , had an idea that became The Hitchhiker's Guide to the.
        3. I learned that Douglas had died the morning after it happened, in May , from the Internet (which had not existed in ).
        4. Douglas Noel Adams (11 March – 11 May ) was an English author, humourist, and screenwriter, best known as the creator of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the.
        5. I remember the moment very clearly: I was with my friend Erica at a writer's conference in , when we learned that Douglas Adams had passed.
        6. He had just returned to the UK from a miserable time in Hollywood, and he was happy to be back. He was kind, he was funny, and he talked. He showed me his things: he was very keen on computers, which barely existed at that point, and on guitars, and on giant inflatable crayons, which he had discovered in America, had shipped to England at enormous expense, before learning that they were, quite cheaply, available in Islington.

          He was clumsy: he would back into things, or trip over them, or sit down on them very suddenly and break them.

          I learned that Douglas had di