20250524 Saturday Book log: The Restaurant at the End of the Universe (1980) Our main cast of space voyaging heroes, Arthur Dent, Ford Prefect, Zaphod Beeblebrox and Trillian Astra, gets split up, reunited and split up again through time travel, teleportation and an increasingly chaotic series of improbable coincidences. It's hard to tell where the story is leading, if it's leading anywhere at all, or if it's all a play on the futility of humanity's deep fixation on The Meaning of Life. There's still a ton of joy and fun to be had in the book's unpredictability and anarchy, though. The humor still lands well, the writing pulls you along through all its distractions and madness, and Douglas Adams makes some brilliant observations on humanity, politics and society that resonate well with a 2025 reader. I first read The Restaurant at the End of the Universe at age 15, but I couldn't remember a single beat from the story here, unlike the first book in the series. Which makes for an even more amusing re-read.