This is not an obituary, there’ll be time enough for them. It is not a tribute, not a considered assessmentof a brilliant life, not a eulogy. It is a keening lament, written too soon to be balanced, too soon to becarefully thought through. Douglas, you cannot be dead.
A sunny Saturday morning in May, ten past seven, shuffle out of bed, log in to e-mail as usual. The usual bluebold headings drop into place, mostly junk, some expected, and my gaze absently follows them down the page.The name Douglas Adams catches my eye and I smile. That one, at least, will be good for a laugh. Then I do theclassic double-take, back up the screen. What did that heading actually say? Douglas Adams died of aheart attack a few hours ago. Then that other cliché, the words swelling before my eyes. It must be part of the joke. It must be some otherDouglas Adams. This is too ridiculous to be true. I must still be asleep. I open the message, from awell-known German software designer. It is no joke, I am fully awake. And it is the right – or rather thewrong – Douglas Adams. A sudden heart attack, in the gym in Santa Barbara. "Man, man, man, man oh man,"the message concludes,
Man indeed, what a man. A giant of a man, surely nearer seven foot than six, broad-shouldered, and he did notstoop like some very tall men who feel uncomfortable with their height. But nor did he swagger with the machoassertiveness that can be intimidating in a big man. He neither apologised for his height, nor flaunted it. Itwas part of the joke against himself.