About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 55. Chapters: Roy Hattersley, Peter Hitchens, Melanie Phillips, Andy Townsend, Paul Dacre, Julie Burchill, Graham Poll, Richard Littlejohn, William Le Queux, Anne Robinson, Derek Draper, Simon Heffer, Ralph Izzard, Daniel Farson, Erika Cheetham, Nigel Dempster, Bernard Levin, Allison Pearson, Des Kelly, Jan Moir, Ian Wooldridge, Leslie Halliwell, Terry Major-Ball, Alex Brummer, Quentin Letts, Keith Waterhouse, Monica Furlong, Paul William Sheehan, Paul Callan, Liz Jones, Lynda Lee-Potter, William Comyns Beaumont, Ronald Symond, Edward Lucas, Vernon Bartlett, Alexander Clifford, Marcus Berkmann, Ann Leslie, John Junor, Tom Utley, Geoffrey Wheatcroft, Carl Fellstrom, David English, Derek Ingram, Michael Henderson, Percy Izzard, Clement Crabbe. Excerpt: Peter Jonathan Hitchens (born 28 October 1951) is an award-winning British columnist and author. He has published five books, including The Abolition of Britain, A Brief History of Crime, The Broken Compass: How British Politics Lost its Way and most recently The Rage Against God. Hitchens writes for Britain's The Mail on Sunday newspaper. A former resident correspondent in Moscow and Washington, Hitchens continues to work as an occasional foreign reporter, and appears frequently in the British broadcast media. He is the younger brother of the writer Christopher Hitchens. Michael Gove, writing in The Times, has asserted that, for Hitchens, what is more important than the split between the Left and the Right is "the deeper gulf between the restless progressive and the Christian pessimist," and in 2010 Hitchens himself wrote "in all my experience in life, I have seldom seen a more powerful argument for the fallen nature of man, and his inability to achieve perfection, than those countries in which man sets himself up to replace God with the State." Peter Hitchens was born in 1951 in...