Gore Vidal
October 3rd, 2012
 On this date in 1925, writer Gore Vidal was born at West Point, 
New York, where his father worked as an instructor. Vidal largely grew 
up in the home of his grandfather, Sen. Thomas P. Gore, D-Okla. He 
graduated from Philips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire and joined the 
Enlisted Reserve Corps. His first novel, Williwaw, was published when he was only 19. It was followed by the wave-making The City and the Pillar
 (1948), which featured a sympathetic gay protagonist. Vidal is the 
prolific author of many other novels and plays, many based on history 
and politics, and has worked in TV and the movies. Novels include Julian (1964), Myra Breckenridge (1968), Burr (1974), and Live from Golgotha
 (1992), an irreverent satire imagining the New Testament events if 
reported on TV. The cousin of Al Gore, he has made some political runs, 
including a try for the U.S. Senate seat in California in which he came 
in second of nine in a 1982 race. Vidal is perhaps best known for his 
refreshing and acerbic interviews and one-liners, such as his famous 
remark about Ronald Reagan: "A triumph of the embalmer's art." "Probably
 no American writer since Franklin has derided, ridiculed, and mocked 
Americans more skillfully and more often than Vidal," wrote Gordon S. 
Wood (The New York Times, December 14, 2003). Vidal's essays, such as "Pink Triangle and Yellow Star" (1981), are collected in Armageddon (1987). Palimpsest
 (1995) is his well-received autobiography. Vidal rarely misses a chance
 to diss religion or monotheism: "I regard monotheism as the greatest 
disaster ever to befall the human race. I see no good in Judaism, 
Christianity, or Islam. . ." (letter to Warren Allen Smith, 1954, Who's Who in Hell). Listen to Vidal's interview on Freethought Radio (scroll to May 3, 2010).
 In an essay for Esquire, "What I've Learned" (June 2008), Gore advised:
 "Get rid of religion. It'll do you no good." He said: Nonprofit status 
is what created the Bible Belt. The tax code brought religion back to 
this country." Gore lived and died an unbeliever: "Because there is no 
cosmic point to the life that each of us perceives on this distant bit 
of dust at galaxy's edge, all the more reason for us to maintain in 
proper balance what we have here. Because there is nothing else. No 
thing. This is it. And quite enough, all in all." (Cited by NPR, August 
1, 2012) D. 2012.
“Christianity is such a silly religion.”
— Gore Vidal (1925-), Time Magazine, Sept. 28, 1992
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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