Christopher Hitchens was a contributing editor to Vanity Fair, Slate, and the Atlantic, and the author of numerous books, including works on Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine, and George Orwell. He also wrote the international bestsellers god Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything, Hitch-22: A Memoir, and Arguably. He died in December 2011.
"A book driven by his desire to look death squarely in the face and
provoked by detractors who were certain he would turn to religion
when confronted with it. He did not... [MORTALITY is] full of
humility, a humility worthy of kings."--Newsday
"A jovially combative riposte to anyone who thought that death
would silence master controversialist Hitchens."--Kirkus Reviews
(Starred)
"Dealing unflinchingly with bodily ravagement, reflecting on life's
beauty and remaining rakish about his ideological foes, Hitchens
proves that great writers are truly immortal."--People, 4-star
review
"Like virtually everything he wrote over his long, distinguished
career, diamond-hard and brilliant . . .vivid, heart-wrenching and
haunting - messages in a bottle tossed from the deck of a sinking
ship as its captain, reeling in agony and fighting through the fog
of morphine, struggles to keep his engines going . . . a final,
defiant, and well-reasoned defense of his non-God-fearingness . . .
It is, however, sobering and grief-inducing to read this brave and
harrowing account of his 'year of living dyingly' in the grip of an
alien that succeeded where none of his debate opponents had in
bringing him down."--Christopher Buckley, New York Times Book
Review
"Mortality is a crash course in lived
philosophy....bracing."--Salon
"Mortality is not just for Hitchens' fans, but for all.... With
almost unimaginable clarity, grace and wit, even for the master
wordsmith we had grown used to. We see here a very warm and
thoughtful human being. Poignant and deeply personal thoughts on
the art of writing and the heartbreak of losing his unmistakable
speaking voice during the course of treatment....The furthest thing
from grim, Mortality is a gift. Not just from Christopher, but from
Carol as well. Do pick it up."--Huffington Post
"Mortality, the final book by Christopher Hitchens, the
Anglo-American essayist, reporter, devout atheist and all-around
intellectual troublemaker, won't be shelved in the travel section.
But in a sense that's where it belongs, along with the best of the
literary travel writers. Think George Orwell, one of Hitchens'
heroes....Few writers wrote sharper sentences or treated words with
more respect."--USA Today, "The 25 Big Books of Fall"
"Remarkable . . . The book's power lies in its simplicity, in its
straightforward, intelligent documenting, its startling refusal of
showiness or melodrama or grandeur....The great polemicist,
essayist, conversationalist, provocateur, arguer, has done
something extraordinary in this book. He has created yet another
style, another mode, another way of being and thinking and
dreaming, on his death bed; he has written in many ways an
un-Hitchens-like book, eluding proclamations, resolutions, mastery,
wit, at-easeness with opinion, in favor of unnerving directness, of
harrowing documentation. He has allowed his dismantled confidence,
his undoing to breathe, and to live in the pages, in a way that is
startling and new and an achievement unlike his others, different
in kind, yet equally ambitious and relentlessly honest."--Katie
Roiphe, Slate.com
"Stark and powerful... Hitchens's powerful voice compels us to
consider carefully the small measures by which we live every day
and to cherish them."--Publisher's Weekly (Starred)
"The melancholy irony of 'Mortality' is that it gave our best
essayist - I can't think of someone who comes even close - the
chance to grapple with the most intractable subject, to wrestle
with the angel of death in a battle we will all have to lose at one
time or another.....The voice is gone. The words remain."--The New
York Daily News
"There are no clever pitches to diminish the horror vacui of
oblivion. He offers no self-pity or special pleading. The book is
tough-minded . . . poignant, but the poignancy is ours, not
his."--Wall Street Journal
"These essays are brave and fitting final words from a writer at
the end of his journey."--Bookpage
"This trenchant, sassy, tragically posthumous little black book
earns a proud spot on the end-of-life shelf, along with Julian
Barnes' Nothing to Be Frightened Of, Joan Didion's The Year of
Magical Thinking, Leo Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilyich, Joan
Wickersham's The Suicide Index, Saul Bellow's Ravelstein, and
Philip Roth's Everyman and Exit Ghost, to name just a
few."--NPR.org
"To the end, he produces sentences of startling beauty and
precision . . . One of our best is gone, yet "Mortality" is a
powerful and moving final utterance."--San Francisco Chronicle
"Unsparingly blunt, rhetorically suave . . . It's rare that someone
so powerfully writes of such deep connections between the death of
intellectual ability and the decay of the body."--Boston Globe
In June 2010, journalist and author Christopher Hitchens was touring the U.S. to promote his memoir Hitch-22 when he suffered from the first symptoms of what would ultimately be diagnosed as esophageal cancer. Until his death in December 2011, Hitchens would continue to write about politics, culture, and his terminal illness. Adapted from a series of Vanity Fair columns, the author's last book turns his acidic insights toward his own emotions as he copes with inevitability: "Will I really not live to see my children married? To watch the World Trade Center rise again? To read-if not indeed to write-the obituaries of elderly villains like Henry Kissinger and Joseph Ratzinger?" Narrator Simon Prebble turns in a fine performance. Yet, it's incongruous to hear Hitchens's incisive words without the authenticity and strength of his voice. As a speaker, Hitchens was magnetic and it's doubtful that any performer, no matter how strong, could truly capture the force of his presence. Perhaps appropriately, this audio edition, written but not read by Hitchens, simply feels incomplete. A Twelve hardcover. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
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