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What is this green alien supposed to be on the American covers?


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12















I have the 2017 Del Rey Books mass market edition of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Here is the front cover:



The cover of the 2017 edition



It features a circular green alien with two arms sticking its tongue out. Looking at other covers, the first American edition also has this character:



The first American edition's cover



Who is this supposed to be? I have no clue.










share|improve this question

























  • I'm not sure that's actually supposed to be anyone/anything. The Vogons are (dark) green, but they have eyes and legs. The only other possibly relevant green reference I can find is that it's the colour of the Betelgeuse trading scouts, but presumably that would be a bit more serious.

    – DavidW
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    Interesting. It can't be Wowbagger the Infinitely Prolonged, because he first appears in the third book of the trilogy. Perhaps it's a visual representation of the Guide itself, with its message "DON'T PANIC".

    – b_jonas
    9 hours ago











  • FWIW, in my collection none of the books of the series have that thing on the cover.

    – DavidW
    9 hours ago











  • @DavidW Are you in America? It’s only on American books.

    – Stormblessed
    9 hours ago













  • Without answering yes or no, many years ago certain dedicated SF book sellers used to be able to sneak^W bring in UK editions of high-demand books when, as here, the US editions were only printed a year or more later...

    – DavidW
    8 hours ago


















12















I have the 2017 Del Rey Books mass market edition of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Here is the front cover:



The cover of the 2017 edition



It features a circular green alien with two arms sticking its tongue out. Looking at other covers, the first American edition also has this character:



The first American edition's cover



Who is this supposed to be? I have no clue.










share|improve this question

























  • I'm not sure that's actually supposed to be anyone/anything. The Vogons are (dark) green, but they have eyes and legs. The only other possibly relevant green reference I can find is that it's the colour of the Betelgeuse trading scouts, but presumably that would be a bit more serious.

    – DavidW
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    Interesting. It can't be Wowbagger the Infinitely Prolonged, because he first appears in the third book of the trilogy. Perhaps it's a visual representation of the Guide itself, with its message "DON'T PANIC".

    – b_jonas
    9 hours ago











  • FWIW, in my collection none of the books of the series have that thing on the cover.

    – DavidW
    9 hours ago











  • @DavidW Are you in America? It’s only on American books.

    – Stormblessed
    9 hours ago













  • Without answering yes or no, many years ago certain dedicated SF book sellers used to be able to sneak^W bring in UK editions of high-demand books when, as here, the US editions were only printed a year or more later...

    – DavidW
    8 hours ago














12












12








12








I have the 2017 Del Rey Books mass market edition of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Here is the front cover:



The cover of the 2017 edition



It features a circular green alien with two arms sticking its tongue out. Looking at other covers, the first American edition also has this character:



The first American edition's cover



Who is this supposed to be? I have no clue.










share|improve this question
















I have the 2017 Del Rey Books mass market edition of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Here is the front cover:



The cover of the 2017 edition



It features a circular green alien with two arms sticking its tongue out. Looking at other covers, the first American edition also has this character:



The first American edition's cover



Who is this supposed to be? I have no clue.







character-identification object-identification the-hitchhikers-guide-to-the-galaxy






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 5 hours ago









Buzz

44k7 gold badges148 silver badges236 bronze badges




44k7 gold badges148 silver badges236 bronze badges










asked 9 hours ago









StormblessedStormblessed

4,8933 gold badges23 silver badges62 bronze badges




4,8933 gold badges23 silver badges62 bronze badges













  • I'm not sure that's actually supposed to be anyone/anything. The Vogons are (dark) green, but they have eyes and legs. The only other possibly relevant green reference I can find is that it's the colour of the Betelgeuse trading scouts, but presumably that would be a bit more serious.

    – DavidW
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    Interesting. It can't be Wowbagger the Infinitely Prolonged, because he first appears in the third book of the trilogy. Perhaps it's a visual representation of the Guide itself, with its message "DON'T PANIC".

    – b_jonas
    9 hours ago











  • FWIW, in my collection none of the books of the series have that thing on the cover.

    – DavidW
    9 hours ago











  • @DavidW Are you in America? It’s only on American books.

    – Stormblessed
    9 hours ago













  • Without answering yes or no, many years ago certain dedicated SF book sellers used to be able to sneak^W bring in UK editions of high-demand books when, as here, the US editions were only printed a year or more later...

    – DavidW
    8 hours ago



















  • I'm not sure that's actually supposed to be anyone/anything. The Vogons are (dark) green, but they have eyes and legs. The only other possibly relevant green reference I can find is that it's the colour of the Betelgeuse trading scouts, but presumably that would be a bit more serious.

    – DavidW
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    Interesting. It can't be Wowbagger the Infinitely Prolonged, because he first appears in the third book of the trilogy. Perhaps it's a visual representation of the Guide itself, with its message "DON'T PANIC".

    – b_jonas
    9 hours ago











  • FWIW, in my collection none of the books of the series have that thing on the cover.

    – DavidW
    9 hours ago











  • @DavidW Are you in America? It’s only on American books.

    – Stormblessed
    9 hours ago













  • Without answering yes or no, many years ago certain dedicated SF book sellers used to be able to sneak^W bring in UK editions of high-demand books when, as here, the US editions were only printed a year or more later...

    – DavidW
    8 hours ago

















I'm not sure that's actually supposed to be anyone/anything. The Vogons are (dark) green, but they have eyes and legs. The only other possibly relevant green reference I can find is that it's the colour of the Betelgeuse trading scouts, but presumably that would be a bit more serious.

– DavidW
9 hours ago





I'm not sure that's actually supposed to be anyone/anything. The Vogons are (dark) green, but they have eyes and legs. The only other possibly relevant green reference I can find is that it's the colour of the Betelgeuse trading scouts, but presumably that would be a bit more serious.

– DavidW
9 hours ago




1




1





Interesting. It can't be Wowbagger the Infinitely Prolonged, because he first appears in the third book of the trilogy. Perhaps it's a visual representation of the Guide itself, with its message "DON'T PANIC".

– b_jonas
9 hours ago





Interesting. It can't be Wowbagger the Infinitely Prolonged, because he first appears in the third book of the trilogy. Perhaps it's a visual representation of the Guide itself, with its message "DON'T PANIC".

– b_jonas
9 hours ago













FWIW, in my collection none of the books of the series have that thing on the cover.

– DavidW
9 hours ago





FWIW, in my collection none of the books of the series have that thing on the cover.

– DavidW
9 hours ago













@DavidW Are you in America? It’s only on American books.

– Stormblessed
9 hours ago







@DavidW Are you in America? It’s only on American books.

– Stormblessed
9 hours ago















Without answering yes or no, many years ago certain dedicated SF book sellers used to be able to sneak^W bring in UK editions of high-demand books when, as here, the US editions were only printed a year or more later...

– DavidW
8 hours ago





Without answering yes or no, many years ago certain dedicated SF book sellers used to be able to sneak^W bring in UK editions of high-demand books when, as here, the US editions were only printed a year or more later...

– DavidW
8 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















15














Apparently it's called "The Cosmic Cutie".



This question was also asked on reddit, which links to this FAQ.




According to Douglas, the little green blobby planet thing (nickamed
the "Cosmic Cutie") has been struck the final blow, and will not be
featured on any of the new (American) HHG books. Here's what Adams
had to say:



"I HATE the little green blob and have spent years locked in arguments
with my publishers with me trying to get rid of the obscene little thing.
I've finally secured its demise with the new Ballantine editons of the soft
cover backlist."



Non-American readers are perhaps unaware of this book adornment, as it
was only the American publishing houses that determined that without a
consistent motif, all of us Yanks would become hopelessly confused by a
series of books with different names.




It's also mentioned on a Wikipedia talk page. It's mentioned on Topless Robot, which does not provide a source, and The Geek Twins, which in turn links to this FAQ.






share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    web.archive.org/web/20150726224647/http://www.zootle.net/afda/…

    – DavidW
    8 hours ago











  • He clearly failed to get it removed from the covers.

    – Stormblessed
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    @Stormblessed Depending when that quote was from, there was a Ballantine edition that didn't have it: isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?41559

    – DavidW
    8 hours ago













  • @DavidW But he seems to have failed at "securing it's demise". Doesn't seem like it really stayed dead.

    – JMac
    8 hours ago



















1














Somebody asked Douglas Adams about that green blob thing at a 1997 or 1998 reading I attended. The question (asked by a preteen kid) got a round of applause before the author even had a chance to answer. Adams immediately got very animated and said, "I have no idea!" He explained that he "hate[d] the bloody thing," had no idea why anybody had put it on the covers to begin with, and had fought (successfully) to keep it off the cover of the omnibus edition of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series.






share|improve this answer


























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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    15














    Apparently it's called "The Cosmic Cutie".



    This question was also asked on reddit, which links to this FAQ.




    According to Douglas, the little green blobby planet thing (nickamed
    the "Cosmic Cutie") has been struck the final blow, and will not be
    featured on any of the new (American) HHG books. Here's what Adams
    had to say:



    "I HATE the little green blob and have spent years locked in arguments
    with my publishers with me trying to get rid of the obscene little thing.
    I've finally secured its demise with the new Ballantine editons of the soft
    cover backlist."



    Non-American readers are perhaps unaware of this book adornment, as it
    was only the American publishing houses that determined that without a
    consistent motif, all of us Yanks would become hopelessly confused by a
    series of books with different names.




    It's also mentioned on a Wikipedia talk page. It's mentioned on Topless Robot, which does not provide a source, and The Geek Twins, which in turn links to this FAQ.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 2





      web.archive.org/web/20150726224647/http://www.zootle.net/afda/…

      – DavidW
      8 hours ago











    • He clearly failed to get it removed from the covers.

      – Stormblessed
      8 hours ago






    • 1





      @Stormblessed Depending when that quote was from, there was a Ballantine edition that didn't have it: isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?41559

      – DavidW
      8 hours ago













    • @DavidW But he seems to have failed at "securing it's demise". Doesn't seem like it really stayed dead.

      – JMac
      8 hours ago
















    15














    Apparently it's called "The Cosmic Cutie".



    This question was also asked on reddit, which links to this FAQ.




    According to Douglas, the little green blobby planet thing (nickamed
    the "Cosmic Cutie") has been struck the final blow, and will not be
    featured on any of the new (American) HHG books. Here's what Adams
    had to say:



    "I HATE the little green blob and have spent years locked in arguments
    with my publishers with me trying to get rid of the obscene little thing.
    I've finally secured its demise with the new Ballantine editons of the soft
    cover backlist."



    Non-American readers are perhaps unaware of this book adornment, as it
    was only the American publishing houses that determined that without a
    consistent motif, all of us Yanks would become hopelessly confused by a
    series of books with different names.




    It's also mentioned on a Wikipedia talk page. It's mentioned on Topless Robot, which does not provide a source, and The Geek Twins, which in turn links to this FAQ.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 2





      web.archive.org/web/20150726224647/http://www.zootle.net/afda/…

      – DavidW
      8 hours ago











    • He clearly failed to get it removed from the covers.

      – Stormblessed
      8 hours ago






    • 1





      @Stormblessed Depending when that quote was from, there was a Ballantine edition that didn't have it: isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?41559

      – DavidW
      8 hours ago













    • @DavidW But he seems to have failed at "securing it's demise". Doesn't seem like it really stayed dead.

      – JMac
      8 hours ago














    15












    15








    15







    Apparently it's called "The Cosmic Cutie".



    This question was also asked on reddit, which links to this FAQ.




    According to Douglas, the little green blobby planet thing (nickamed
    the "Cosmic Cutie") has been struck the final blow, and will not be
    featured on any of the new (American) HHG books. Here's what Adams
    had to say:



    "I HATE the little green blob and have spent years locked in arguments
    with my publishers with me trying to get rid of the obscene little thing.
    I've finally secured its demise with the new Ballantine editons of the soft
    cover backlist."



    Non-American readers are perhaps unaware of this book adornment, as it
    was only the American publishing houses that determined that without a
    consistent motif, all of us Yanks would become hopelessly confused by a
    series of books with different names.




    It's also mentioned on a Wikipedia talk page. It's mentioned on Topless Robot, which does not provide a source, and The Geek Twins, which in turn links to this FAQ.






    share|improve this answer















    Apparently it's called "The Cosmic Cutie".



    This question was also asked on reddit, which links to this FAQ.




    According to Douglas, the little green blobby planet thing (nickamed
    the "Cosmic Cutie") has been struck the final blow, and will not be
    featured on any of the new (American) HHG books. Here's what Adams
    had to say:



    "I HATE the little green blob and have spent years locked in arguments
    with my publishers with me trying to get rid of the obscene little thing.
    I've finally secured its demise with the new Ballantine editons of the soft
    cover backlist."



    Non-American readers are perhaps unaware of this book adornment, as it
    was only the American publishing houses that determined that without a
    consistent motif, all of us Yanks would become hopelessly confused by a
    series of books with different names.




    It's also mentioned on a Wikipedia talk page. It's mentioned on Topless Robot, which does not provide a source, and The Geek Twins, which in turn links to this FAQ.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 8 hours ago

























    answered 9 hours ago









    RajRaj

    2,3571 gold badge8 silver badges21 bronze badges




    2,3571 gold badge8 silver badges21 bronze badges








    • 2





      web.archive.org/web/20150726224647/http://www.zootle.net/afda/…

      – DavidW
      8 hours ago











    • He clearly failed to get it removed from the covers.

      – Stormblessed
      8 hours ago






    • 1





      @Stormblessed Depending when that quote was from, there was a Ballantine edition that didn't have it: isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?41559

      – DavidW
      8 hours ago













    • @DavidW But he seems to have failed at "securing it's demise". Doesn't seem like it really stayed dead.

      – JMac
      8 hours ago














    • 2





      web.archive.org/web/20150726224647/http://www.zootle.net/afda/…

      – DavidW
      8 hours ago











    • He clearly failed to get it removed from the covers.

      – Stormblessed
      8 hours ago






    • 1





      @Stormblessed Depending when that quote was from, there was a Ballantine edition that didn't have it: isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?41559

      – DavidW
      8 hours ago













    • @DavidW But he seems to have failed at "securing it's demise". Doesn't seem like it really stayed dead.

      – JMac
      8 hours ago








    2




    2





    web.archive.org/web/20150726224647/http://www.zootle.net/afda/…

    – DavidW
    8 hours ago





    web.archive.org/web/20150726224647/http://www.zootle.net/afda/…

    – DavidW
    8 hours ago













    He clearly failed to get it removed from the covers.

    – Stormblessed
    8 hours ago





    He clearly failed to get it removed from the covers.

    – Stormblessed
    8 hours ago




    1




    1





    @Stormblessed Depending when that quote was from, there was a Ballantine edition that didn't have it: isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?41559

    – DavidW
    8 hours ago







    @Stormblessed Depending when that quote was from, there was a Ballantine edition that didn't have it: isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?41559

    – DavidW
    8 hours ago















    @DavidW But he seems to have failed at "securing it's demise". Doesn't seem like it really stayed dead.

    – JMac
    8 hours ago





    @DavidW But he seems to have failed at "securing it's demise". Doesn't seem like it really stayed dead.

    – JMac
    8 hours ago













    1














    Somebody asked Douglas Adams about that green blob thing at a 1997 or 1998 reading I attended. The question (asked by a preteen kid) got a round of applause before the author even had a chance to answer. Adams immediately got very animated and said, "I have no idea!" He explained that he "hate[d] the bloody thing," had no idea why anybody had put it on the covers to begin with, and had fought (successfully) to keep it off the cover of the omnibus edition of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series.






    share|improve this answer




























      1














      Somebody asked Douglas Adams about that green blob thing at a 1997 or 1998 reading I attended. The question (asked by a preteen kid) got a round of applause before the author even had a chance to answer. Adams immediately got very animated and said, "I have no idea!" He explained that he "hate[d] the bloody thing," had no idea why anybody had put it on the covers to begin with, and had fought (successfully) to keep it off the cover of the omnibus edition of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series.






      share|improve this answer


























        1












        1








        1







        Somebody asked Douglas Adams about that green blob thing at a 1997 or 1998 reading I attended. The question (asked by a preteen kid) got a round of applause before the author even had a chance to answer. Adams immediately got very animated and said, "I have no idea!" He explained that he "hate[d] the bloody thing," had no idea why anybody had put it on the covers to begin with, and had fought (successfully) to keep it off the cover of the omnibus edition of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series.






        share|improve this answer













        Somebody asked Douglas Adams about that green blob thing at a 1997 or 1998 reading I attended. The question (asked by a preteen kid) got a round of applause before the author even had a chance to answer. Adams immediately got very animated and said, "I have no idea!" He explained that he "hate[d] the bloody thing," had no idea why anybody had put it on the covers to begin with, and had fought (successfully) to keep it off the cover of the omnibus edition of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 5 hours ago









        BuzzBuzz

        44k7 gold badges148 silver badges236 bronze badges




        44k7 gold badges148 silver badges236 bronze badges






























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