LIVE from the NYPL: Writing Posthumously: A Conversation with Christopher Hitchens:With video
On June 4, 2010, three days before he became gravely ill, I spoke to Christopher Hitchens about his memoir, Hitch 22. I was particularly taken not by the politics, which everyone knew and though of interest, mattered less to me just then, than the literary side. Hitch was a great reader and more candid in print about his life, his mother and father, his origins. When I played W. H. Auden reading, and Isaiah Berlin teaching a class on Russian Thought at Oxford, Christopher's eyes lit up. He felt pleasure in reciting poetry, moving his lips to Auden's reading, and hearing his old professor, Isaiah Berlin talk. A less pugilist side to Hitch. And then that evening, there was the memoir and the 2 minute clip you are about to see where we spoke about death and dying and our mutual interest in orbituaries. When I asked him why write the memoir now, he aswered simply: You've got to do it in time.
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Comments
For me, it wouldn't be so much of the fear of death, as it would be the loss of living.
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