Friday, December 16, 2011
Questionable Vanity Fair Author Christopher Hitchens Dies at 62
Christopher Hitchens Questionable author Christopher Hitchens, whose works condemned religion in addition to such politicians as Mother Teresa and Henry Kissinger, has died, based on the Vanity Fair. He was 62. Hitchens, who had been a adding editor towards the magazine for pretty much 2 decades, died of pneumonia in the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston following a lengthy fight with esophageal cancer. Begin to see the stars we lost this season "Christopher Hitchens would be a wit, a charmer, along with a troublemaker, and also to individuals who understood him well, he would be a gift from, dare I only say it, God," Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter authored. "You would be hard-pressed to locate a author who could match the amount of exquisitely crafted posts, essays, articles, and books he created in the last 40 years.Inch Born in Portsmouth, England, Hitchens analyzed at Oxford before writing for that left-wing magazine The Brand New Statesman. He eventually gone to live in the U.S. as well as in the the nineteen nineties started showing up on cable tv where he notoriously belittled then-leader Bill Clinton. In 1992, he became a member of Vanity Fair, where he authored questionable essays about such high-profile people as Michael Moore, Mel Gibson, George W. Rose bush and Mother Teresa. Inside a 2004 piece for Slate about Moore's documentary Fahrenheit 9/11, Hitchens authored, "Fahrenheit 9/11 is really a sinister exercise in moral frivolity, crudely disguised being an exercise in importance. It's also a spectacle of abject political cowardice hiding itself like a illustration showing 'dissenting' bravery." Hitchens also authored many books, such as the 2007 bestseller, God Isn't Great: How Religion Poisons Everything. The writer released his final collection, Perhaps, earlier this September. Hitchens, who had been married two times, is made it by his three children. Watch a current interview with Hitchens:
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