Letters to a Young Contrarian by Christopher Hitchens

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(Paperback - REV)

  • Publisher: Perseus Publishing
  • Pub. Date: April 2005
  • ISBN-13: 9780465030330
  • Sales Rank: 66,647
  • 160pp
  • Edition Description: REV
 
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Synopsis

Bestselling author Christopher Hitchins inspires future generations of radicals, rebels, and angry young men and women in these essays on the importance of disagreement to personal integrity, informed discussion, and democracy itself. The work is part of a series, "The Art of Mentoring," based on Rainer Maria Rilke's Letters to a Young Poet. Hitchins is a popular columnist for Vanity Fair and The Nation. This work lacks a subject index.

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Book Magazine

Journalist Christopher Hitchens turns out to be the more modest mentor. His nineteen letters are as engaging as Dershowitz's and more provocative. Hitchens is eloquent and savagely witty, and his approach here is theoretical, less nuts-and-bolts than Dershowitz's. In an environment of political correctness and overly polite discourse, Hitchens' appeal is in his desire to challenge and shake up the system. The author reminds us that "human beings do not, in fact, desire to live in some Disneyland of the mind, where there is an end to striving and a general feeling of contentment and bliss." While most desire harmony and peace, Hitchens argues for the usefulness of strife and debate: "In life we make progress by conflict and in mental life by argument and disputation."

For Hitchens, "a state of praise and gratitude and adoration" is analogous to a "world of hellish nullity and conformism." Hitchens is deeply skeptical of those who criticize the politics of division, "as if politics was not division by definition," he points out. Having established himself as our preeminent political bad boy for his scathing attacks on Mother Teresa, the Clintons and Henry Kissinger, Hitchens will surely offend some with his antitheism: "I not only maintain that all religions are versions of the same untruth, but I hold that the influence of churches, and the effect of religious belief, is positively harmful," writes Hitchens, for whom religion "is, and always has been, a means of control."

The author is most effective when challenging us to resist the merely familiar and popular. The contrarian, Hitchens asserts, must be bold and aggressive, must not let weak assertions andbeliefs get by. Moreover, he or she must be willing to tell people what they don't want to hear. Recall how Hitchens, in his book The Missionary Position, was highly critical of alliances that Mother Teresa, esteemed and sacred to many, had formed with politicians and businessmen. Equally valuable is Hitchens' advice about overcoming self-doubt. "I am consoled, when I suffer this very same apprehension, by the thought that the Pope and the Queen and the President all wake up every morning with a similar gnawing fear. Or that, if they do not, they deserve to be doubted and distrusted even more, if that were possible, than I doubt and distrust them now."

Hitchens' articulate and perceptive arguments have enormous appeal, as does Dershowitz's keen scrutiny of the American legal system, and their books effectively hold the reader's attention. In an age shaped by pervasive opinion polling, both writers advise us to stand alone and passionately resist what others—guided by habit, good manners or conformity—too easily accept. Surely such a lesson is beneficial to us all.
—James Schiff

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Biography

Christopher Hitchens is a contributing editor to Vanity Fair. His numerous books include Letters to a Young Contrarian and Why Orwell Matters.

Customer Reviews

voilaby Anonymous

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February 02, 2002: If these are the only responses Hitchens managed to provoke, then I have a reason to first laugh myself silly and then lament at the hopelessness of our mighty, yet tragically flawed human race. I am sure Hitchens? shares my sentiments reading these. The first four reviews are banal to the point of being worthless, but by the time you get to Kirkus, they start to either make completely misguided jabs at him or offer him praise of cosmic proportion. Without further a due, let the butchering begin! Dear Kirkus, Although you may find Hitchens? work a lame muse full of trifle advice, may I remind you that the work is intended for a young and, therefore, an inexperienced contrarian. A seasoned fox like yourself ought to know better just from reading the title. Perhaps, some Letters to an Old Contrarian will suit to your liking, but unfortunately Hitchens has yet to provide such a luxury. Dear Ted, The whole point of the book is to emphasize the value of dissent in itself, and to encourage you to think for yourself. If you have truly accepted that message then you have no reason to whine about not being given an answer on whether there is a difference between Democrats and Republicans. Meanwhile, I scorn your remark that Hitchens attachment to justice may be based on financial greed. If you still have complaints about the practicality of this book - well, I want to welcome you to the world of that useless thing called philosophy. It?s spelled Teresa by the way. Dear Jonathan, Do not compare Hitchens to Socrates. There are two important reasons for this. First, to offer such a comparison is to indulge the former in the greatness of the latter. Second, Socrates was NEVER a devout follower of the common good. Foremost on his mind was pursuit of knowledge and wisdom, each for its own sake. He shied away from the political life of Athens and spent most of his life wearing a dirty window curtain while gazing at the heavens above. When he did question others, it was only for the sake of advancing his own knowledge. I highly recommend you reread your Apologia. Hitchens, on the other hand, is an undying servant of justice and the common good. His knowledge, wisdom, and rhetoric are only means to achieving material results in the barricades of Bastilles. Dear mystical reviewer, Hitchens nowhere attempts to excuse King?s adultery, but merely suggests that our `idols? are human after all. It also inserted as a stab at religion, since it points to a simple fact that God did not choose King for his moral upstanding to serve the divine. Rather, it was King who chose his path and his own moral actions. King?s fallibility and, therefore, humanity provide a glimmer of hope for Hitchens of being one day being revered as the former.

What does Hitchens stand for anyway?by Anonymous

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December 04, 2001: 'Letters To A Contrarian' is really a book of letter Hitchins writes to himself about, primarily, how to maintain his radical values. It is really a book about who Christopher is. His books are perhaps the most interesting and original books (who else would vilify Mother Theresa and Henry Kissinger?) written on current history and politics; yet the most irrelevant too. Hitchens is extremely bright (even in an extremely bright profession) , controversial, radical, iconoclastic, educated, experienced, and still astonishingly irrelevant. One time he is taking on Mother Teresa, then appearing as a leftist on C-SPAN against his conservative British brother, then he turns up on Charlie Rose saying he is a libertarian, then he writes regularly for The Nation (while preferring globalization), and finally he applauds an article in the National Review or the Weekly Standard. This latest book is the most scattered of all amounting to little more than a general pep talk about how to keep up your radical credentials (don't follow the crowd, etc.), or, how to be Christopher Hitchens. Being so independent, cool, intellectual, and affected (unshaven, trench coat, chain smoking, intellectual verbal cadence) may be good for ones' image and career but how does it really help the reader who time and again is given only the choice of voting for a Democrat or Republican? In the beginning there was Thomas Jefferson arguing for freedom and Alexander Hamilton arguing for Government. Today the Democrats and Republicans are still arguing about the same issue, while Mr. Hitchens is oddly arguing about something else not even defined, let alone on the ballot? Why doesn't he write a book on why Trent Lott and Sam Daschel have split the United States gov't along stupid or irrelevant lines? Why doesn't he address the issue every American faces every time he enters a voting booth? In truth, the more relevant and central an issue is to World History the more Mr. Hitchens stays away from it. So, if you want to be a proud but harmless radical, read this book. But, please consider that when you are done, like Marlon Brando in 'The Wild Ones' you'll still have to figure out what it is that you want to be radical about, if that should matter to you at all. The scattershot Hitchins/Brando approach is just not relevant to the choice voters face. The non-intellectual mass media keeps America divided and in the middle because that is how the they make the most money and find the biggest audience while the very intellectual Christopher Hitchens does the same thing because that is how he too makes the most money. Or, perhaps in an existential world 'cool and independent' has a value all by itself? But, if you want to read a book that seeks to be relevant as much as this book seeks to avoid relevancy try 'Understanding The Difference Between Democrats And Republicans'


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