“A poised masterpiece ...” — Los Angeles Times

What passes for political discussion in conventional circles rarely runs the gamut, even from A to B. To probe the deeper meanings of power requires inquiry beyond the vapidity of would-be Presidents, in Britain as well as the US. Fiction has traditionally been an alternative container for such ideas, sometimes a soapbox, sometimes a sanctuary, but always available and frequently used.

Many have seen the meeting between literature and politics as necessarily fraught. Norman Podhoretz examined the intersection under the rubric “The Bloody Crossroads.” Christopher Hitchens, in this sparkling engagement with novels and their authors, pursues a different approach. Taking inspiration from Shelley's description of the poet as an “unacknowledged legislator” , he shows that while the encounter between writers and those in power is not always smooth, it generally embodies a dialectic that is well worth pursuit.

Hitchens provides rich evidence that his own sallies as a political journalist, so effectively deployed with the publication of the best-selling No One Left to Lie To last year, are nourished by a close engagement with a broad sweep of novelists. Here Norman Mailer and Gore Vidal's encounters with American revolution are scrutinized in interview; George Orwell’s role as a fulcrum between left and right is carefully weighed; an appraisal of the fatwah issued against Salman Rushdie becomes a meditation on the West’s misunderstood encounter with Islam; Ernest Hemingway is defended against the vagaries of fashion; and Hitchens’s delicious literary taste skips along a line from Oscar Wilde and P.G. Wodehouse, through Philip Larkin and Patrick O’Brian, to Walter Mosley,Tom Wolfe and Susan Sontag.

“Hurrah for Christopher Hitchens, whose Unacknowledged Legislation is a paragon of the genre.” — The Times, Books of the Year

Christopher Hitchens lives in Washington, D.C. and writes for Slate and the Daily Mirror and is contributing editor to The Atlantic Monthly and Vanity Fair.

“Christopher Hitchens’ writing has sweep and flair. He is accurate where others are merely dutiful, unpredictable where the tendency is to go for the cliché. In short, brilliant. And he is an internationalist, respectfully at home where others are merely brash or provincial.” — Edward W. Said

Publication
Cloth: Nov. 2000
Paper: Jan. 2002

430 pages

Cloth
ISBN-13: 978 1 85984 786 2
US$25 / £17 / CAN$35

Paper
ISBN-13: 978-1-85984-383-3
US$14 / £9 / CAN$20




Other Verso books by
Christopher Hitchens:

The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice

Hostage to History: Cyprus from the Ottomans to Kissinger

The Elgin Marbles: Should They Be Returned to Greece?

No One Left to Lie To:
The Values of the Worst
Family