We have just received word from Christopher Hitchens' management.
He had a medical emergency over the weekend but is now back at home and is doing ok, all things considered. He was not available to communicate before this morning. He is quite upset that he missed this event as he has never had to cancel at the very last minute before.
More:
http://www.facebook.com/notes/think-inc/update-christopher-hitchens/236424399743658
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The British political class may stop asking the one question that has obsessed it for decades. By Christopher Hitchens "It was about...
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Thanks to Atheist Altar for uploading. March 2009 at Samford University in Birmingham, AL. This debate is for sale on DVD and is every now...
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Time has come to publish the last post on this site. I've been posting links and articles for three years, and it's been great. I a...
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One week after the fatwa on Salman Rushdie was issued in 1989, Hitchens appeared on C-SPAN to discuss The Satanic Verses and freedom of spee...
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Kindle Exclusive "..Hitchens reflects upon the life and death of Osama bin Laden in this sobering Kindle Single." If you don...
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The writings of the martyred socialist Rosa Luxemburg give a plaintive view of history’s paths not taken. By Christopher Hitchens ...
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CH interviewed in his home in Washington D.C by Jeremy Paxman. Broadcasted on Nov 29, 2010. Play Full Interview.
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Vanity Fair July 2011 By Christopher Hitchens "Hating the United States—which funds Islamabad’s army and nuclear program to the h...
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Mox News April 16, 2010. CNN/AC360. Christopher Hitchens debates Tony Perkins on the US Federal District Court ruling that the "Nation...
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In the battle for ideas, scientists could learn from Christopher Hitchens. By Michael Shermer " Although he has no formal training in...

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Think Inc Update
September 20, 2011Posted by Tom at 15:16 5 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, Think Inc
V.F. Portrait: Joan Didion
September 17, 2011In The Year of Magical Thinking, the 2005 best-seller, Joan Didion dissected the trauma of losing her husband, John Gregory Dunne. With Blue Nights, to be published in November by Knopf, she agonizingly explores the heavier blow that followed: the death of their daughter, Quintana Roo.
Christopher Hitchens contemplates a tragic achievement.
http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2011/10/joan-didion-201110
Posted by Tom at 08:20 1 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, Joan Didion, Vanity Fair
Arguably by Christopher Hitchens: review
September 16, 2011The Telegraph | Christopher Hitchens’s provocative journalism is greater than the sum of its parts, argues Nicholas Shakespeare as he reviews Arguably.
Every generation tends to look silly to the one after; those beehive hairdos, those chain smokers. Reacting to previous experience, we don’t make progress, necessarily. Vicars have randy daughters and randy daughters give birth to boys who in turn become vicars.
More: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/bookreviews/8765444/Arguably-by-Christopher-Hitchens-review.html
Posted by Tom at 05:25 6 comments
Labels: 2011, Arguably, book review, Christopher Hitchens, Essays, Nicholas Shakespear, the telegraph
Man of His Words
September 10, 2011The New York Times | Sunday Book Review
"Anyone who occasionally opens one of our more serious periodicals has learned that the byline of Christopher Hitchens is an opportunity to be delighted or maddened — possibly both — but in any case not to be missed. He is our intellectual omnivore, exhilarating and infuriating, if not in equal parts at least with equal wit."
Don't miss the Book Review Podcast (Bill Keller on the career of Christopher Hitchens).
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/11/books/review/arguably-essays-by-christopher-hitchens-book-review.html
From 9/11 to the Arab spring
By Christopher Hitchens
Three men: Mohamed Bouazizi, Abu-Abdel Monaam Hamedeh, and Ali Mehdi Zeu – a Tunisian street vendor, an Egyptian restaurateur and a Libyan husband and father. In the spring of 2011, the first of them set himself alight in the town of Sidi Bouzid, in protest at just one too many humiliations at the hands of petty officialdom. The second also took his own life as Egyptians began to rebel en masse at the stagnation and meaninglessness of Mubarak's Egypt.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/sep/09/christopher-hitchens-911-arab-spring
Posted by Tom at 08:11 7 comments
Labels: 2011, 9/11, Arab spring, Christopher Hitchens, Egypt, Guardian, Libya, Tunisia
There's just one Hitch
September 7, 2011LAST year, just before he was diagnosed with advanced oesophageal cancer, Christopher Hitchens published the unexpectedly moving memoir Hitch-22.
"I soon enough realised when young," he revealed in that book, "that I did not have the true 'stuff' for [writing] fiction and poetry. And I was very fortunate indeed to have, as contemporaries, several practitioners of those arts who made it obvious to me, without unduly rubbing in the point, that I would be wasting my time if I tried."
As a journalist, Hitchens has done everything with his time except waste it. He has made himself the key writer of the post-9/11 age. No novelist or poet has registered the texture of the past decade as pungently as Hitchens has in the essay form.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/arts-arc/theres-just-one-hitch/story-e6frg8nf-1226126501899
Simply Evil
September 5, 2011By Christopher Hitchens
The proper task of the "public intellectual" might be conceived as the responsibility to introduce complexity into the argument: the reminder that things are very infrequently as simple as they can be made to seem. But what I learned in a highly indelible manner from the events and arguments of September 2001 was this: Never, ever ignore the obvious either.
http://www.slate.com/id/2303013/
Posted by Tom at 05:28 53 comments
Labels: 2011, 9/11, al-Qaida, Christopher Hitchens, Islam, muslim, Simply Evil, Slate
Arguably: Essays by Christopher Hitchens
September 1, 2011Reviewed by Vinton Rafe McCabe / New York Journal of Books
“Christopher Hitches has the eye of a painter and the literary skill of a novelist. He infuses his essays with the same narrative thrust that can be found in the most addictive fiction.”
"Arguably: Essays by Christopher Hitchens proves as mercurial as the man himself; it is at times infuriating, tedious, educational, gloriously candid, and completely hilarious. The man has an opinion on everything—literally everything from the genius of Charles Dickens to the virtues of masturbation."
Read review here (nyjournalofbooks.com)
3 min. audio clip from Arguably, read by Simon Prebble: http://www.emusic.com/listen/#/audiobooks/book/Christopher-Hitchens-Arguably-MP3-Download/10103043.html
Posted by Tom at 21:32 2 comments
Labels: 2011, Arguably, Christopher Hitchens, Essays, New York Journal of Books, review
2012 Global Atheist Convention
Tickets on sale now!
Christopher Hitchens, Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, Daniel Dennett
Lawrence Krauss..
http://www.atheistconvention.org.au/
http://www.facebook.com/atheistconvention
http://twitter.com/#!/atheistcon
Rick Perry's God
August 29, 2011By Christopher Hitchens
"I happened to spend several weeks in Texas earlier this year, while the Lone Star State lay under the pitiless glare of an unremitting drought. After a protracted arid interval, the state's immodest governor, Rick Perry, announced that he was using the authority vested in him to call for prayers for rain."
Read More (Slate)
Posted by Tom at 18:57 17 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, faith, religion, Rick Perry, Texas
The Crimes of Col. Qaddafi
August 26, 2011In the euphoria of the current celebrations, we must not lose sight of the former leader's foul deeds.
By Christopher Hitchens
"In George Orwell's 1939 novel, Coming Up for Air, his narrator, George Bowling, broods on the special horrors of the new totalitarianism and notices "the colored shirts, the barbed wire, the rubber truncheons," but also, less obviously perhaps, "the processions and the posters with enormous faces, and the crowds of a million people all cheering for the Leader till they deafen themselves into thinking that they really worship him, and all the time, underneath, they hate him so that they want to puke."
Read More (Slate)
Posted by Tom at 05:35 4 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, Libya, Qaddafi, Slate
Christopher Hitchens on Latest Book: 'Might Be My Very Last'
August 25, 2011Prolific writer and political journalist Christopher Hitchens will release a new book this September titled Arguably: Essays by Christopher Hitchens.
The first new book of essays since 2004, Arguably features a collection of essays previously written for Vanity Fair – of which he is a contributing editor – Slate, The Atlantic, and The New York Times.
Some titles include: “God of Our Fathers: The United States of Enlightenment”; “America the Banana Republic”; “Why Women Aren’t Funny”; “First, Silence the Whistle-Blower”; “Iran’s Waiting Game”; “Easter Charade”; “Words Matter”; and “Wine Drinkers of the World, Unite.”
Read More (christianpost.com)
Posted by Tom at 06:52 10 comments
Labels: 2011, Arguably, book, Christopher Hitchens, Essays
Arguably: Essays by Christopher Hitchens
August 23, 2011In Stock. Ships from and sold by Amazon.com. Gift-wrap available.
Product Description
The first new book of essays by Christopher Hitchens since 2004, ARGUABLY offers an indispensable key to understanding the passionate and skeptical spirit of one of our most dazzling writers, widely admired for the clarity of his style, a result of his disciplined and candid thinking. Topics range from ruminations on why Charles Dickens was among the best of writers and the worst of men to the haunting science fiction of J.G. Ballard; from the enduring legacies of Thomas Jefferson and George Orwell to the persistent agonies of anti-Semitism and jihad. Hitchens even looks at the recent financial crisis and argues for arthe enduring relevance of Karl Marx. The book forms a bridge between the two parallel enterprises of culture and politics. It reveals how politics justifies itself by culture, and how the latter prompts the former. In this fashion, ARGUABLY burnishes Christopher Hitchens' credentials as-to quote Christopher Buckley-our "greatest living essayist in the English language."
Posted by Tom at 17:30 2 comments
Labels: 2011, amazon.com, Arguably, book, Christopher Hitchens, Essays
Britons Have Been Violent and Cruel for Generations
August 18, 2011Still, England has not yet collapsed into a nightmare of destruction and despair.
By Christopher Hitchens
"I realized that the collapse of British society into a Hobbesian nightmare of mutual predation and despair was still some distance off when I caught two little straws in the wind. The first was a well-framed photograph of a badly scorched bit of London, taken on the morning after a night of riots and vandalism."
Read More (Slate)
Posted by Tom at 20:33 11 comments
Labels: 2011, Christopher Hitchens, England, London, Slate, UK riots