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The Faith of Christopher Hitchens

The Restless Soul of the World's Most Notorious Atheist

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

2016 Winner of the Gospel Coalition Book Awards

At the time of his death, Christopher Hitchens was the most notorious atheist in the world.  And yet, all was not as it seemed.  “Nobody is not a divided self, of course,” he once told an interviewer, “but I think it’s rather strong in my case.”   Hitchens was a man of many contradictions:   a Marxist in youth who longed for acceptance among the social elites; a peacenik who revered the military; a champion of the Left who was nonetheless pro-life, pro-war-on-terror, and after 9/11 something of a neocon; and while he railed against God on stage, he maintained meaningful—though largely hidden from public view—friendships with evangelical Christians like Francis Collins, Douglas Wilson, and the author Larry Alex Taunton.  

In The Faith of Christopher Hitchens, Taunton offers a very personal perspective of one of our most interesting and most misunderstood public figures.  Writing with genuine compassion and without compromise, Taunton traces Hitchens’s spiritual and intellectual development from his decision as a teenager to reject belief in God to his rise to prominence as one of the so-called “Four Horsemen” of the New Atheism.  While Hitchens was, in the minds of many Christians, Public Enemy Number One, away from the lights and the cameras a warm friendship flourished between Hitchens and the author; a friendship that culminated in not one, but two lengthy road trips where, after Hitchens’s diagnosis of esophageal cancer, they studied the Bible together.  The Faith of Christopher Hitchens gives us a candid glimpse into the inner life of this intriguing, sometimes maddening, and unexpectedly vulnerable man.

“If everyone in the United States had the same qualities of loyalty and care and concern for others that Larry Taunton had, we'd be living in a much better society than we do.” ~ Christopher Hitchens

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 4, 2016
      Evangelical thinker Taunton (The Grace Effect), the executive director of the Christian advocacy non-profit Fixed Point Foundation, begins this book with a confession: for years Taunton resisted writing about the late, infamous atheist Christopher Hitchens (1949â2011), because he didn't want to betray their friendship. Taunton overcomes his discomfort by recalling words from Hitchens himself that seemed to pave the way for this project, and by sidestepping sheer biography, instead "giv some account for soul." What follows are some fascinating recollections of Taunton's conversations with Hitchens (a tidbit about Al Sharpton, lengthier debates about religion and God) that occurred during their unlikely and unusual friendship, punctuated by information gathered from Peter, Hitchens's brother. Taunton's smooth and accessible prose brings to life what seems to have been a dear and lively friendship between two thinkers at odds politically and religiously, but not intellectually. However, readers will be left with a lingering and uncomfortable feeling that Taunton has wrongly allowed readers to enter into an intimate and sacred space.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from April 1, 2016
      A public-speaking organizer Hitchens met during his lucrative late years as a propagandist for atheism, Taunton, whose work is to propagandize as diligently for evangelical Christianity, thinks his famous friend was changing his mind when he knew him. He doesn't say Hitchens was a last-minute convert. But judging from what he learned about Hitchens and, more important, his interactions with Hitchens as he squired him to debates in which Hitchens was the star, if not always the victor, he sees Hitchens as a genuine seeker for truth. Hitchens recoiled from those, like Jerry Falwell and Al Sharpton, he saw as professing religion to feather their nests and feed their egosa temptation Hitchens, whose atheism earned him a living, knew of firsthand. On the other hand, Hitchens respected and liked sincere believers, such as he found many evangelicals to be. He was also a prodigious reader of classic Western literature, including the Biblemoreover, a conservative one, who staunchly preferred the KJV. In a couple of road trips toward the very end, he and Taunton conducted a two-man study of John's Gospel, and it was then, especially, that Taunton saw Hitchens eager to reconsider Christianity, in particular. Lively and loving, Taunton's memoir of his surprising friendship could hardly be more enjoyably engrossing.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

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