Remembering Robert Silvers, one of America's greatest intellectual benefactors

The co-founder and editor of The New York Review of Books died Monday. But his enduring gifts to our culture live on.

Robert Silvers.
(Image credit: AP Photo/Stuart Ramson)

America has lost one of its greatest benefactors.

Robert Silvers, co-founder and longtime editor of The New York Review of Books, died on Monday at the age of 87. When he teamed up with freelance editor Barbara Epstein and literary critic Elizabeth Hardwick in starting the magazine in 1963, they committed an act of patriotism, giving the United States something it lacked and sorely needed: a space for the rigorous cultivation and elevation of the American mind. Fifty-four years later, that space is still there — vibrant, thriving, alive. It is Silvers' enduring gift to our country and our culture.

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Damon Linker

Damon Linker is a senior correspondent at TheWeek.com. He is also a former contributing editor at The New Republic and the author of The Theocons and The Religious Test.