I love Molly Ivins.
I’ve started off plenty of blog entries with that phrase over the years, and my sentiment hasn’t changed and won’t; but the news from Austin is sad and discouraging.
Molly Ivins’ cancer ‘back with a vengeance’
By LISA SANDBERG
Copyright 2007 Houston Chronicle Austin BureauAUSTIN – Nationally syndicated columnist Molly Ivins has been hospitalized in her recurring battle with breast cancer.
“I think she’s tough as a metal boot,” her brother, Andy Ivins, said Friday after a visit with her at Seton Medical Center in Austin.
Andy Ivins said his sister was admitted to Seton on Thursday. She spent Friday morning with longtime colleagues and friends, and was “sleeping peacefully” when he arrived later in the day.
A self-described leftist agitator, Ivins, 62, completed a round of radiation treatment in August, but the cancer “came back with a vengeance,” and has spread through her body, Andy Ivins said.
Ivins’ columns, which she infuses with passion and wit, appear in more than 300 newspapers around the country. She’s written six books, four of which were best sellers.
They included Shrub: The Short But Happy Political Life of George W. Bush, Bushwhacked: Life in George W. Bush’s America, which she wrote with longtime friend Lou Dubose; and Who Let the Dogs In? Incredible Political Animals I Have Known.
Ivins was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1999. A year later, she described her treatment with characteristic wit: “First they poison you; then they mutilate you; then they burn you. I’ve had more fun.”
She received her third diagnosis a year ago; despite her illness, she’s managed to crank out her columns.
In a piece earlier this month, she wrote that she was starting a newspaper crusade to end the war in Iraq.
“Raise hell,” she urged readers. “Think of something ridiculous to make the ridiculous look ridiculous. … We need people in the streets, banging pots and pans and demanding, ‘Stop it, now!’ “
A friend of mine visited Molly in the hospital yesterday, she reports that Molly still has “that great, infectious smile.”
I admire Molly Ivin’s broad Texas smile and her unique ability to make us cry until we laugh.
We’re pulling for you, Molly.