1: Introduction by James Wolcott 2: The Wrong Stuff: On Tom Wolfe, 1983 3: Diary: Operation Desert Storm, 1991 4: Oh, Lionel! On P.G. Wodehouse, 1992 5: Mary, Mary: On J. Edgar Hoover, 1993 6: Say what you will about Harold: On Harold Wilson, 1993 7: Diary: The Salman Rushdie Acid Test, 1994 8: Diary: Spanking, 1994 9: Who Runs Britain? Police Espionage, 1994 10: Lucky Kim: On Kim Philby, 1995 11: Diary: At the Oscars, 1995 12: Look over your shoulder: The Oklahoma Bombing, 1995 13: Letters: Richard Cummings, Christopher Hitchens 14: After-Time: On Gore Vidal, 1995 15: A Hard Dog to Keep on the Porch: On Bill Clinton, 1996 16: The Trouble with HRH: On Princess Margaret, 1997 17: Brief Shining Moments: Kennedy and Nixon, 1998 18: Letters: Arthur Schlesinger Jr, Christopher Hitchens, Mervyn Jones 19: Acts of Violence in Grosvenor Square: On 1968, 1998 20: Diary: The 'Almanach de Gotha', 1998 21: Moderation or Death: On Isaiah Berlin, 1998 22: Letters: Roger Scruton, Francis Wheen, Mark Lilly, Christopher Hitchens 23: What a Lot of Parties: On Diana Mosley 24: 11 September 1973: Pinochet and Britain
Christopher Hitchens (1949-2011) spent two decades contributing to the London Review ofBooks. He was also a contributing editor to Vanity Fair and a columnist for Slate. He was theauthor of numerous books, including works on Thomas Jefferson, George Orwell, MotherTeresa, Henry Kissinger and Bill and Hillary Clinton, as well as his international bestseller andNational Book Award nominee, god Is Not Great. His memoir, Hitch-22, which was a SundayTimes bestseller, was nominated for the Orwell Prize and was a finalist for the National BookCritics Circle Award. His last book, Mortality, was published in 2012 by Atlantic Books.
And yet... there are few journalists who can match the verve and
panache of Hitchens's prose. He mixes the loquaciousness of the
barfly with the fluency of the literary artist, and could not pen a
dull sentence if he tried.
*Guardian on AND YET...*
The range is remarkable... Literary criticism is often where he
shines - the pieces on Orwell and Chesterton, in particular, are
alert, nuanced and witty.
*The Financial Times on AND YET*
What you will find in And Yet..., is a body of work that offers
some of the most various, nutritious and amusing prose you are
likely to encounter, and that stands as a testament to the
consolations of a phrase he cherished: litera scripta manet - the
written word remains.
*Daily Telegraph on AND YET...*
A must-read for its laugh-out-loud consideration of Ian Fleming,
alongside his thoughts on Charles Dickens, Salman Rushdie, Hillary
Clinton and Barack Obama. How sad and dull it will be to follow the
next American election without his coruscating commentary.
*GQ on AND YET...*
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