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The Misfit Absinthe Forum > The Sand Box > The Lieberry
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DaRabbit
Hunter S Thompson commited suicide. Don't know why yet.

cry-1.gif
Oscar
The Edge... there is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over.
Hunter S. Thompson
A.B. Normal
This has always been my favorite:

"I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me."
TrainerAZ
Apparently not so well.
Hiram
When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.
Crosby
RIP
Rimbaud
I guess he'd just had enough.
lambchop
Wow. I just learned of this from you, Rabbit.

What better way for him to go? He always did make his own decisions, for better or for worse.

Whenever I write something I will give it to you, as long-ago promised. Perhaps the death of one of the greats will inspire me?
GreenGullet
Raoul Duke Lives!!!!!
Rimbaud
R.I.P.
user posted image
Crosby
An artillery send-off for his remains
Rimbaud
I read about that as well. Fucking awesome. What a badass.
CelticGent
when i die, i want them to cook me and feed a starving village.
Rimbaud
That's beautiful.
Rimbaud
"Can I have seconds, Mom?"

"Sure, dear. There's more than enough to go around."
CelticGent
gravestone rubbing:

R.I.P.
CELTICGENT

a humanitarian.
a tasty, tasty humanitarian.
Rimbaud
It'd be really cool if you had your corpse made into sausages.
CelticGent
rimmy would you like some sausages? em31.gif
A.B. Normal
Damn you for getting that in my head.
CelticGent
funny, that was JFK's last words.
Le Gimp
I read that he was in a fair bit of pain with a broken leg and hp problems. AT 67, I guess he decided not to go down that path.

After watching the ILs declining health since last October, I can understand the decision.

They are both back in the hospital again. I spent the last two days and nights there with Elmer. Not a plesant way to pass the time.
Absinthe_1900
Here you go....... SKULLE02.gif
Absinthe_1900
One for Jack
Absinthe_1900
Rimmy
Absinthe_1900
Mine
TrainerAZ
Shouldn't Jack's say, "I's Burnt"?
Rimbaud
QUOTE(Celticgent @ Feb 24 2005, 12:06 PM)
rimmy would you like some sausages?  em31.gif

I just bought that flick on DVD last week. It's worth owning for that scene alone. I've been singing it to my GF all week. I also doubt her commitment to Sparkle Motion™.
CelticGent
does she like it when you call her by 'daddy'?

have you seen the DD dvd? the commercials with the swazinator are worth the membership fees.
CelticGent
still have to see the new DD dvd...
Rimbaud
I own the regular DVD version. I rented the Director's Cut last week. Which version has the swayzinator commercials?
CelticGent
uh, dunno.

whichever one netflix had like a year and a half ago.


it shows some of the infomercials where patrick swayze was playing grabass with children.

shit...maybe i'm thinking of red dawn.
Rimbaud
That's the regular version. I may have to watch the bonus materials again this evening...
Rimbaud
I just received the newest addition to my T-shirt collection in the mail today...
CelticGent
i had no idea that you could be even sexier!
Rimbaud
Yes, it's true.
CelticGent
oh how your beauty taunts me.
Rimbaud
smiley_abui.gif
Rimbaud
I just read that Hunter S. shot himself while on the phone with his wife.

I'm never getting married.
CelticGent
especially to his wife.
Rimbaud
Indeed, my orange-pubed friend!
Absinthe_1900
QUOTE(Celticgent @ Feb 25 2005, 02:35 PM)
especially to his wife.

She might be lonely now, and ready for some strange. DG.gif
TrainerAZ
A little clown-on-cow action?
Rimbaud
Do you get rainbow-colored milk if you milk a clown?
TheGreenOne
A classic HST column from '65

A Last Drink with HST
Le Gimp
"I always knew that Hunter was going to die before me," Anita Thompson, 32, said of her 67-year-old husband. "I'd accepted that. I just did not know it was going to be like this. I would rather have him back."

Does not sound like his wife would be much of a cow to me...
TrainerAZ
QUOTE(Le Gimp @ Feb 25 2005, 02:48 PM)
"I always knew that Hunter was going to die before me," Anita Thompson, 32, said of her 67-year-old husband. "I'd accepted that. I just did not know it was going to be like this. I would rather have him back."

Does not sound like his wife would be much of a cow to me...

You misspelled "father".
Absinthe_1900
post-8-1074403427.gif choke.gif yes1.gif DG.gif
Le Gimp
I just wonder about the statement by his son that he heard a sound that he thought was a book falling and found his dad dead.

OK,big books can make a bit of noise, but a 45acp makes a BIG noise.

From what little I know, I would suspect he used a 1911A1. That is going to be messy. 230gr hardball at 900f/s in the mouth and out the back of the neck is going to pull lots of tissue and blood with it.
Absinthe_1900
Considering who his dad was, his son was probably used to sounds like that around the house.


'Loving' farewell to writer
Wife details family gathering with Thompson dead in chair

By Jeff Kass, © 2005, Rocky Mountain News
February 25, 2005

ASPEN — Hunter S. Thompson heard the ice clinking.

The literary champ was sitting in his command post kitchen chair, a piece of blank paper in his favorite typewriter, dead of a self-inflicted gunshot through the mouth hours earlier.


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But a small circle of family and friends gathered around with stories, as he wished, with glasses full of his favored HE LICKS HER — Chivas Regal on ice.

"It was very loving. It was not a panic, or ugly, or freaky," Thompson's wife, Anita Thompson, said Thursday night in her first spoken comments since the icon's death Sunday. "It was just like Hunter wanted. He was in control here."

Anita Thompson also echoes the comments that have been made by Hunter Thompson's son and daughter-in-law: That her husband's suicide did not come from the bottom of the well, but was a gesture of strength and ultimate control made as his life was at a high-water mark.

"This is a triumph of his, not a desperate, tragic failure," Anita Thompson said by phone, recounting that she was sitting in her husband's chair he called his catbird seat in the Rockies.

She added: "He lived a beautiful life and he lived it on his own terms, all the way from the very beginning to the very end."

Anita Thompson, like her husband's other close relatives, understood how Hunter Thompson wanted to make his ultimate exit.

"I always knew that Hunter was going to die before me," Anita Thompson, 32, said of her 67-year-old husband. "I'd accepted that. I just did not know it was going to be like this. I would rather have him back."

Yet Anita Thompson quickly came to embrace Hunter Thompson's gesture with a .45-caliber handgun.

She was at the gym when her husband took his life. And when family friend and Pitkin County Sheriff Bob Braudis confirmed the news, her mind raced. "I have enough will power," she thought. "I can turn back time. No, no, no. This is not right. This can't happen."

But upon seeing Hunter Thompson's body, she embraced him. "Since he'd done this, I did not want to make it difficult for his spirit," she said. "I wanted to make it loving."

Anita Thompson believes she will stay on at the expansive property and famous house that was an ever-changing archive of political, literary and name-your-category items. And she will continue to help administer Hunter Thompson's works.

"I'm going to keep on working for Hunter," she said. "He wanted this. He made sure that I was in place to continue on. I'll just do my job until I can be with him again."

She adds, citing the property's nickname: "It will remain Owl Farm. It will remain Hunter Thompson's Owl Farm."

The last book they had read out loud together was parts of Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, a dense classic that explores the fragility of civilization by one of Hunter Thompson's favorite authors. Yet, said Anita Thompson, "He thinks Conrad is funny."

Anita Thompson and her husband had a small tiff that afternoon. Hunter Thompson told her to leave the kitchen that was known across the world as his funky and sacred work space. A weird look came across his face.

"I don't know why he wanted me to leave the room," she said. "It's all speculation. He'd never asked me to leave the room before."

But Anita Thompson did not go to the office with Hunter Thompson's son, as he had requested. Instead, she left the house.
"I'm going to get my gym bag. I'm going," she recalled. "He said, 'I don't want you to leave the house.'"

But she went to the gym. At 5:16 p.m., according to her cell-phone display, she called and spoke with Hunter Thompson for 10 minutes and 22 seconds.

Hunter Thompson put almost everyone on speakerphone. But he picked up the handset to speak with his wife.

"I knew it was odd, first of all, that he picked up with the handset ... I thought, 'That's sweet,'" she said.

The talk was good.

"He said, 'I want you to come home after you work out. Come home and we'll work on a column,'" she recalled.

The conversation, however, never really ended. Before formal goodbyes, Anita Thompson heard a clicking sound. She thought Hunter Thompson might have put down the handset and was typing. Or maybe it was the television. She waited. Maybe a minute passed.

"He did not say anything about killing himself," she said.

The official time of death is 5:42 p.m.

But did Hunter Thompson shoot himself while on the phone with his wife?

"I did not hear any bang," she says, noting that Hunter Thompson's son, who was in the house at the time, believed that a book had fallen when he heard the shot.

Anita Thompson can imagine what was going through Hunter Thompson's mind before the fatal shot: My beloved son, grandson and daughter-in-law are here. I'm in my perch. The fireplace has fire.

"I don't know if it mattered if I was here," Anita Thompson says. "I just like to think, and believe in my heart, he felt happy in his life."

A woman at the gym saw Anita Thompson in the bathroom. She asked if Hunter Thompson was OK. Anita Thompson pretty much blew it off. Rumors about Hunter Thompson were always in the air. Anita Thompson replied, "Oh yeah," but added, "he's been pretty stressed out lately."

A strange look was on the woman's face. She told Anita Thompson to check her phone messages. The woman said she would stay at her side.

Now she was shaking, and could barely dial.

There was a message from Juan Thompson, Hunter's son. "Anita, you have to come home now, he's dead."

Anita Thompson then spoke to the sheriff on the phone.

Had Hunter Thompson intended for his wife of two years to be in the house?

"I don't know, and it's not that important," Anita Thompson says. "I know he loved me. There's no question ... I know he did not want me to find him alone. He knew I was opposed to it."

After wading through the police officers outside, Anita Thompson recalls seeing her husband's dead body for the first time. "He was sitting in the chair when they brought me in, and I got to hug him and kiss him and rub his legs," she said. "All the anger was gone when I saw him."

Anita Thompson does not know why Hunter Thompson chose the .45 from his vast collection of guns. But he was deft with his death. "He did not destroy his face," Anita Thompson says. "He did it in his mouth. His face was beautiful. It was quick. It was not grisly or gruesome by any means. That's probably why he took that gun. He spared us a gruesome scene."

She adds: "His face did look calm and peaceful. He looked content. Like he wanted it."

For Tuesday's cremation, Anita Thompson dressed her husband. He was wearing a light blue, seersucker suit, a Tilly hat and his reading glasses, which he had on when he died. He had asked her to include a lock of her hair with him on this occasion. She complied, and more, cutting off her one-foot long blonde ponytail.

Anita Thompson is depending on mundane chores, but also family, friends and the estimated 50 messages a day.

"Being alone with Hunter in our bedroom, and I've been reading his letters to me," she added. "They have a different charge now. He wrote the most beautiful love letters I have ever seen ... I'm so lucky."

Then there was the flag. Hunter Thompson is an Air Force veteran. And following protocol, according to Anita Thompson, a deputy coroner from neighboring Garfield County presented her with a U.S. flag. It now hangs on a storyboard in the kitchen area, normally used for Hunter Thompson's works in progress. A white, silk scarf that the Dalai Lama presented to Hunter Thompson — the two men looked alike — drapes over the flag.

The house is filled to the brim with flowers — especially orchids, Hunter Thompson's favorite.

"It's nice in here," says Anita Thompson. "He would like it. He does like it, I guess."

Yes, Anita Thompson says, the landmark writer is nearby. "Mainly in moments when you're quiet, you can feel him; it's a different energy than when he was in his body," she says. "It's in the chest. It's all encompassing, but just for a second. It's beautiful."

Hunter Thompson was huge on swimming for his exercise. But he was also known for his love of fine whiskey, and to put it far too mildly, for experimenting with most every intoxicant known to man.

"He loved his body, look what he did to it," Anita Thompson jokes. She then adds a line that maybe even she fails, on its face, to grasp the significance of: "He gave his body everything it wanted."
Crosby
I got to see the Dr. speak twice. The first was about 25 years ago at the College of Marin. He showed up two hours late, slammed a half-gallon jug of Wild Turkey down on the podium and announced “You fuckers have all been ripped off. I’m not doing shit.” He then proceeded to drink heavily and shout replies to shouted questions.
The second time was about five years later at UC Berkeley. He showed up about two hours late. Though the event was slated to be a question and answer format, Hunter ignored every one at the microphones and only responded to the people shouting the loudest, while he drank heavily.
Glad I got the chance.
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