After-Party
Most of the audience filed quietly out of Royce
Auditorium as two small packs of Amis and Hitchens fans swarmed the
apron of the stage, where both authors, positioned at opposite sides,
genially engaged in an impromptu book signing. Hitchens’ people made up
the slightly larger group. They clustered around their author, who was
down on one knee addressing their uniformly upturned faces. Martin Amis,
aided by Mona Simpson—who was simultaneously dealing with her own fans
and auditorium staff wanting to clear the stage—efficiently signed a
steady stream of books placed before him at his podium. As I turned to
leave with my signed books in hand, I noticed Warren Beatty, his eyes on
Amis, ambling slowly toward the stage.
The after-party was held on the terrace of an
upscale hotel in Westwood, and it was a flawless Southern California
night in spring. When I arrived, it was already crowded, but I could
see Martin Amis standing with a small group near the center of the
terrace. Christopher Hitchens huddled off to one side with his group,
which was—again—slightly larger. Tilda Swinton, Michael York, Annette
Benning along with husband Warren, endowed the party with a cachet of
the sort that once was associated with a novel’s adaptation to the “Big
Screen.”
The mood was
definitely up and it was fun being there. I spotted a few friends in a
group that was hovering around a buffet of intricately assembled hors
d’oeuvres and worked my way over to them. We talked about this and
that—about how well the party had turned out, about the pleasures of
drinking good wine under the night sky, and naturally we traded
impressions about the writers’ conversation earlier that evening. A
professor of modern American literature commented that neither author
seemed to understand the role of religion in America, and a poet thought
Hitchens’ comparison of biblical imagery—specifically the burning
bush—with Stephen Hawking’s imagery to be pointless. Hitchens had been
talking about the collective move toward an empirically based
understanding of how the universe works and wanted to make the point
that Hawking’s imagery was superior to religious imagery.
After-Words
In the days that followed, however,
feelings of frustration surfaced. I traded emails and phone calls with
friends who had been there. One labeled Hitchens “The Original
Bloviator” and wondered why Amis had not spoken up more. She thinks
that Hitchens left England because no one would invite him round for the
weekend any longer. Convinced that this is Hitchens’ standard stage
performance, she’s mystified as to why American offers for speaking
engagements continue. A friend who has managed a reading group for 25
years wrote in an email, “… Hitchens hogged the discussion and used the
last few minutes to force his political views on all of us and I
strongly object to this.” Not surprisingly, many people—regardless of
religious orientation—found Hitchens’ shtick on Mother Theresa to be
base and insulting. His too-clever tag lines, such as “missionary
position,” became simply throwaway lines when tossed off mid-rant.
