There have been plenty of generous, heartfelt, and insightful reminiscences of Irving Kristol published since Friday. I've collected the ones that I thought might interest you the most, along with links to some of Kristol's uncollected writing online. Together you can develop your own sense of his life and work. (And don't forget to read the books!) Let's start with with some of the commentary. The New York Times and Washington Post obituaries were comprehensive and well written. On the Manhattan Institute website, Myron Magnet remembers his friend Irving. In Monday's Wall Street Journal, James Q. Wilson reflects on how Irving Kristol changed his life. Here's the Wall Street Journal's editorial board on the "man who put 'neo' into conservatism." On her website, the author Diana West recalls working for Irving at The Public Interest. At Forbes, Steven Menashi focuses on Irving Kristol's moral criticism. AEI collected toasts and remarks from Irving Kristol's seventy-fifth birthday in 1995. Now on to some of Kristol's writing. Here are links to the full archives of his work in The Public Interest and Commentary. On the AEI website, Charles Murray recommended that people read Kristol's 1991 lecture on "The Capitalist Future." In Saturday's paper, the Journal published a selection of highlights from Kristol's columns. And the American Spectator has made available this interesting interview with The Alternative from 1969. Put together, these links make for an excellent reading list on the foundations of the neoconservative persuasion.