Provocative
British-Born Author Christopher Hitchens Dead at 62
December 16, 2011
Provocative British-born American writer and intellectual Christopher
Hitchens has died at the age of 62 following a long battle with cancer.
Vanity Fair magazine, where Hitchens worked as a columnist, said the
sharp-witted commentator died late Thursday of pneumonia, a complication
of the esophageal cancer he was diagnosed with in 2010.
Though Hitchens developed a high-profile in 2007 with his controversial
international bestseller, God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons
Everything, he spent the majority of his career as a war-time
journalist, literary critic and prominent political commentator.
Hitchens did not fit into any easily definable political mold. After
spending years as a correspondent for the left-leaning magazine The
Nation, he went on to become a strong supporter of former Republican
President George W. Bush and the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
Hitchens
was born to a nominally Christian family, but discovered later in life
that his mother had deliberately hidden her Jewish heritage.
His combative disdain for organized religion and love for debates made
him one of the world's most well-respected and most reviled religious
skeptics.
A heavy smoker with a love for Scotch whisky, Hitchens was forced to
postpone a national book tour after being diagnosed with cancer of the
esophagus in June 2010.
Upon his death, Vanity Fair described him as an "incomparable critic
masterful rhetorician, fiery wit, and fearless bon vivant."