Arguably: Essays by Christopher Hitchens
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There are a hundred essays in this tome; the most dazzling of which cover Hitch’s favourite writers. What’s interesting about his peculiar love of literature is that most of his favourite and most obsessively read authors have political and religious views quite oppos...more
All of these articles have appeared in print or online (and many, if not most, are still available there), so some tend to be more topical than others. Considering he writes a column for Slate once a week, it must have been hard to de...more
There were some definite serendipities, such as a run of essays on authors I too like very much (Waugh, Greene, Powell, Wodehouse, Nabokov), and some discussions that made me want to rush out and look again at others (I've only started the Flashman series, and he kept bringing it up). The po...more
Christopher Hitchens, Arguably
Adding a short synopsis/review after I finish each section.
“Gods of Our Fathers”
Review of Moral Minority: Our Skeptical Founding Fathers, by Brooke Adams. Defining quote, ”The connection between religious skepticism and political liberty may not be as absolute…, but there is no doubt that some such connection existing very vividly in the minds of those ‘men of the Enlightenment’ who adorned Philadelphia...more
I was so enthusiastic with this point of view discovered in the first pages of this enormous book that I kept reading for a while before acknowledging that it's pointless to continue in a systematic manner and I began browsing and skipping.
The journalist's work is condemned t...more
A line appearing somewhere near the midpoint of this collection of essays is revealing: “Stay with me. I've been doing the hard thinking for you.” Christopher Hitchens does a lot of hard thinking apparently; keep up if you can. This may suggest that considerable ego is involved, and given the author's reputation you can be sure that it is, but on display too is considerable erudition.
The book is composed of six sections roughly dividing the essays on theme. Most important for an understanding o
...more
For details, see my week by week summary.
Overview on the first half of the book.
Christopher Hitchens read a lot of books. Some of the writers I haven't even read a single work. He knew his subject well, and don't mind pissing on the greats as long as he think he got a valid point to illustrate to his readers. That's what I like about him. He cou...more
From one of the most admired public intellectuals of our time, and a multi-award winning and #1 bestselling author, comes a collection of his most important and controversial essays on the theme of culture and politics and how the two relate.
ReviewA New York Times Book Review Best Book
A Globe and Mail Best Book
“Bright, witty… one of the most lucid and humane voices of our age.”
—The Globe and Mail
Praise for Christopher Hitchens:
"Whether he's dodging bullets in Sarajevo, dissing Bill Clinto
Before his death, I had a vague awareness of Christopher Hitchens, having read some of his contributions to Vanity Fair, but he never struck me as someone I should be paying close attention to until after he had died a...more
I know the above stated facts through one source only: reading this collection of just some of his essays, art...more
Kurt Vonnegut commented humans have minds like gearteeth and all of us are missing some. Alas, there are great voids in my own gray matter! Somehow I didn't take a formal world history class and only have...more
The full-scale electronic edition is almost as infuriating as Hitchens' views on Iraq; it's 750 pages of unindexed text, and the table of contents is impossible to scroll. (Or that might just be my [Kindle] Touch.)...more
Though, I can’t imagine getting a word in edgewise because Hitchens writes like a man who always thought he was the smartest man in the room. And for the most part, I’ll bet he...more
Many of the essays in here are great. On matters religious, Hitchens postulates that Ben Franklin was an atheist, not a deist, that Lincoln was even more skeptical about organized religion than has been portrayed in the past and other things.
Much of this comes from reviews of books from various magazines. I read most of these, though skipping a few about modern British authors.
His take on Gore Vidal is great; Vidal...more
But what took...more
So...Hitchens' acerbic and relentless commitment to the cerebral...more
Thus, my next book was 'Samuel Johnson: A Life', by David Nokes, closely followed by 'Benjami...more
Notes:
Hitchens's enthusiasm for American history and American ideas is stunning and heartening...more
Someone should bring Hitchens' two collections of essays for his Minority Report column in The Nation back into print. Right now they are only available from used book sellers for outrageous prices. I guess they are collector's items. If y...more

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