![]() Recalling time spent with Salman Rushdie, including a visit from the author of "The Satanic Verses" while he hid from potential assassins, Hitchens reiterates his objections to religious faith and fanaticism, which he'd previously rehearsed in "God Is Not Great" and other books. ![]() Though his account of a tight bond with Amis mostly amounts to a vigorous celebration of friendship, it also summarizes a dispute the two had in print over the history of communism. ![]() Chapters devoted to his friendships with other writers provide Hitchens with opportunities to revisit some of these moments in the life of the mind. ![]()
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