Thom Jones, author of ‘The Pugilist at Rest,’ dies at 71

By Hillel Italie, The Associated Press

NEW YORK, N.Y. – Thom Jones, an acclaimed short-story writer who drew upon family tragedy and his own painful struggles for “The Pugilist At Rest” and other collections, has died.

Jones died Friday in Olympia, Washington, his longtime home, according to his literary representatives, the Wylie Agency. He was 71 and died of complications from diabetes.

“The Pugilist at Rest,” a bestseller published in 1993, was his debut book and a finalist for the National Book Award. Its stories of violence, trauma and spiritual striving led to comparisons to Ernest Hemingway, Norman Mailer and fellow Pacific Northwest resident Raymond Carver among others.

“Jones’ steady strength is in the unprettified dialogue, in the fine gutbucket descriptions where irony tangles with Hemingwayan macho,” the Los Angeles Times noted in its review.

Jones was in his late 40s when “The Pugilist at Rest” came out, having worked as a janitor among other jobs, and such stories as the title piece and “The Black Lights” reflected a deeply troubled life.

Raised in Aurora, Illinois, in a family of fighters, and himself an amateur boxer, Jones was scarred by the suicide of his father and suffered for years from physical and emotional problems, including diabetes, depression and alcoholism. His influences ranged from the bleak philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer to the gloomy rock music of the Doors.

His boxing days had ended after he was punched so hard in the head, during a bout held while he was in the Marines, that he was institutionalized. He soon learned he had epilepsy.

“It was so horrible that to this day it terrifies me; Satan had me,” he said in 1993. “When I saw the black lights, it was like God is a zero, like he said, ‘I am nothing.’ I’m a weak person. I need the face of God. I think a lot of people do.”

Jones had attended the prestigious writers’ workshop at the University of Iowa, and his stories appeared in The New Yorker, Esquire and elsewhere, establishing him as a forceful new voice even before “Pugilist.” But he only completed two other books, the collections “Cold Snap” and “Sonny Liston Was a Friend of Mine,” which came out in the late 1990s.

Although plagued by health issues, he continued to write. The story “Bomb Shelter Noel” ran in Playboy in 2011. Two years earlier, Granta published his dark and humorous essay about working in a General Mills factory in the 1960s.

Jones is survived by his wife and daughter.

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