Posts Tagged ‘Christopher Hitchens’

“I have more than once in my time woken up feeling like death. But nothing prepared me for the early morning last June when I came to consciousness feeling as if I were actually shackled to my own corpse. The whole cave of my chest and thorax seemed to have been hollowed out and then refilled with slow-drying cement. I could faintly hear myself breathe but could not manage to inflate my lungs. My heart was beating either much too much or much too little. Any movement, however slight, required forethought and planning. It took strenuous effort for me to cross the room of my New York hotel and summon the emergency services…” –from an account by Christopher Hitchens of his battle with cancer. Here.

I’ve read several of this great writer’s books. His God is NOT Great has become probably one of the top three atheist books ever written (also check his The Portable Atheist), and is certainly as representative in the emerging  New Age of Enlightenment as were the writers  David Hume and Thomas Hobbes of the Old Enlightenment during the eighteenth century. I’m now reading the fascinating  memoir Hitch 22.

“Hitch 22″

Posted: June 8, 2010 in Books
Tags: ,

“…Hitchens recalls being approached by Amis who claimed that he needed to visit a brothel in order to write his now seminal novel Money. After taking a moment to compose himself, Amis starts again saying: “And you,” he pauses for a moment and continues “are fucking well coming with me.” As surprised as Hitchens was, it was only the tip of the iceberg. He later learned that Amis had “cleared” this most sordid affair with his then-wife Antonia telling her: “I’m going to a handjob parlor with Hitch.” After their visit to the brothel, the two partners in crime went to a Japanese restaurant to drink sake in an effort to cure their hangovers from the night before…” Read more of this and several other quotes here; they’re from Hitchens memoir, Hitch 22. Antoher new book of memoirs I can’t wait to read is Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s Nomad.

The most recent book of Hitchens’ that I’ve read is God Is Not Great, probably one of the top three or four books on the absurdity of religion.

The venerated Mencken of yesteryear. According to the Youtube poster this is an excerpt from the  only extant audio of HL (the rest of the recording is available on this channel).

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An example of Christopher Hitchens’ acerbic wit; he is, after all, the new Mencken (and according to what I’ve read he could drink old H. L. under the table).

Probably the two greatest and wittiest writers and debaters today–Dinesh D’Souza (What’s so Great about Christianity) and Christopher Hitchens (God is Not Great)–had a go at each other’s belief system at Freedom Fest ’08. The two have had many such debates together and you never come away without having learned something from both sides. Here, for example, is Part 5. These videos are available on Google vids and Youtube.

In my humble opinion Englishman turned American, scotch drinker, part time socialist and god debunker (among other things) Christopher Hitchens certainly qualifies as the new H. L. Mencken. Along with his books (God is Not Great, The Missionary Position, A Long Short War) you may want to read his columns at Slate. The excerpt from below concerns the partonizing of Sarah Palin. The reference to the “most dysfunctional family” stems from what Hitchens wrote about the Clintons in No One Left to Lie: The Values of the Worst Family.

I could well be wrong, but I think something similar is involved in the attempt to paint the Palin family as if it were Arkansas on ice or Tobacco Road with igloos and Inuit. Very well, she possibly has had her Troopergate and even trailer-park moments. But whom exactly did the Democrats drown in moist applause, for two nights running, in Denver? The most dysfunctional family ever to occupy not the vice-presidential mansion but the executive one. It’s hard to imagine that there will be any more unwanted pregnancies or shotgun weddings when or if the Palins move to the Naval Observatory on Massachusetts Avenue, whereas with the Clintons, the very thing that made all Bill’s friends turn white and pee green was that they made him the president, and he still wouldn’t stop. For me, it is astonishing that the Democrats have been babbling all week as if this point isn’t just waiting—indeed begging—to be made in riposte to their “opposition research.”