As noted
earlier today by Larry Thornberry, author, essayist, playwright and
screenwriter Gore Vidal
passed away last night of pneumonia. He was 86.
Vidal was born into a wealthy family as Eugene Vidal, Jr. His
father, Eugene Vidal served under FDR as Director of the Bureau of
Air Commerce. He also made a success of himself in aviation
co-founding several airlines including Northeast Airlines which he
started along with Amelia Earhart. It is believed that Vidal and
Earhart were also romantic partners which the younger Vidal
maintained was so. However, there is some dispute to these facts
and his belief could have been the product of a wild imagination or
wishful thinking. His maternal grandfather, Thomas Gore was a long
serving Democratic Senator from Oklahoma. Vidal would later adopt
his maternal grandfather’s name.
Despite his prolific output, Vidal will probably be best
remembered for his outlandish opinions and acerbic manner as
demonstrated by this
famous exchange between him and National Review
founder William F. Buckley during the 1968 Democratic Convention in
Chicago. While Buckley later regretted calling Vidal “a queer”,
Vidal apparently had no such regret in referring to Buckley as “a
crypto-Nazi.’
One could make the case that Vidal significantly contributed to
the decline of liberal thought. He engaged in conspiracy
theories suggesting that both FDR knew about Pearl Harbor and
that George W. Bush knew about the 9/11 attacks ahead of time. To
give you an idea of Vidal’s state of mind, he told Joy
Behar that he thought Barack Obama was “too intelligent” to be
President and that he wished he had murdered Bush much to the
delight of Behar and her staff. Of course, if any writer were to
have wished he had murdered Obama, Ms. Behar would be the first to
issue a condemnation.
Vidal was also not fond of Jews. In 1986, he referred
to American Jews as “Israeli fifth columnists” who “stay among us;
in order to make propaganda and raise money for Israel.”
I think Leon Wiseltelier, the longtime book editor for The
New Republic, summed Vidal up best when he called him
“Abu Vidal”.