The Salmon of Doubt: Hitchhiking the Galaxy One Last Time is a posthumous collection of previously published and unpublished material by Douglas Adams. It consists largely of essays about technology and life experiences, but its major selling point is the inclusion of the incomplete novel on which Adams was working at the time of his death, The Salmon of Doubt (from which the collection gets its title, a reference to the Irish myth of the Salmon of Knowledge).
English editions of the book were published in the United States and UK in May 2002, exactly one year after the author's death.
The Salmon of Doubt was originally intended to be a Dirk Gently novel. The plot, set a few weeks after the events in The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul, involves Dirk Gently refusing to help find the missing half of a cat, receiving large amounts of money from an unknown client, and then flying to the United States. Dirk pays a visit to Kate Schechter (who had first appeared in The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul) and tells her that prior to the potential client, he had been so bored that he had started a habit of dialling his own phone number and discovered he'd answered his own calls. A faxed summary reprinted before the text mentions travelling "through the nasal membranes of a rhinoceros, to a distant future dominated by estate agents and heavily armed kangaroos."
Staring bearing
The load of past days
Waiting trailing
Much too many ways
Hiding providing
The next you had to brave
Fading and hating
The robe the past you gave
Come leave the sea
Of burden you trail
Come leave the sea
And raise from the vale
Come leave the sea
And stand upright
To see your sea
From a distant sight
Despising arising
The fate would like to turn
Blessing confessing
The safe you prefer
Wounded and bounded
There's still the hope to flee
The craving for changing
Is yielded by apathy
Every trial
Remain a scar
Of hate and sorrow
On your memories
Like million nails stung
The past in your vein
And then you start