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This is the guy conservatives love to quote when it comes to MM.

Summer beach-reading season is just beginning, and already several books have broken out from the pack, such as Walter Isaacson’s biography of Albert Einstein, and Conn and Hal Iggulden’s “The Dangerous Book for Boys.”

But the biggest surprise is a blazing attack on God and religion that is flying off bookshelves, even in the Bible Belt. “God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything,” by Christopher Hitchens, wasn’t expected to be a blockbuster. Its publisher, Twelve, a fledgling imprint owned by France’s Lagardère SCA, initially printed a modest 40,000 copies. Today, seven weeks after the book went on sale, there are 296,000 copies in print. Demand has been so strong that booksellers and wholesalers were unable to get copies a short time after it hit stores, creating what the publishing industry calls a “dark week.” One experienced publishing veteran suggests that Mr. Hitchens will likely earn more than $1 million on this book.

A spin-off is already in the works. Rival publisher Da Capo Press, which is owned by Perseus Books LLC, got in touch with Mr. Hitchens and signed him up to edit, “The Portable Atheist,” a compilation of essays by such writers as Mark Twain and Charles Darwin that will be published in the fall.

“This is atheism’s moment,” says David Steinberger, Perseus’s CEO. “Mr. Hitchens has written the category killer, and we’re excited about having the next book.”

Mr. Hitchens, 58 years old, is well-known in media and political circles as an erudite raconteur and essayist; his Vanity Fair columns and frequent TV appearances on political shows have raised his profile. More recently, his loud support for the Iraq war has infuriated many of his former compatriots. His unabashed affection for alcohol and tobacco has been widely chronicled — sometimes by himself. “I smoke, sure, and I can take a drink when offered,” he says. “It’s impolite to decline.”

Now he has turned his caustic gaze on God and organized religion. “A heavenly dictatorship would be like living in a celestial North Korea, except it would be worse because they could read your thoughts even when you were asleep,” said Mr. Hitchens in an interview. “At least when you die you get out of North Korea, which is the most religious state I’ve ever seen.”

Story

Written by Guss

3 Responses to “Hitchens Book Debunking The Deity Is Surprise Hit”


  1. Big Mo Says:


    Visit Big Mo

    Uh-huh. And his “take-down” of God is, well, stupid.

    A man can be right on Mr. Stupid White Fat Man Moore but utterly wrong on God. Conservatives are totally aware of where Hitchens stands, and in fact have already responded brilliantly.

    And the ranks of conservatism actually do include aetheists.


  2. Guss Says:


    Visit Guss

    Ouch!:)


  3. ~J~ Says:


    Visit ~J~

    I read a rebuttal to his book in a column written by his brother. His brother is as much of a believer as he is not and he did a good job talking about their upbringing and his brother’s atheism.

    Unfortunately, this is a sign of the times. Atheists also have a god, but that god is themselves.