Tuesday, September 14, 2010

David Thompson, 1971-2010

I heard the news this morning and thought it was a joke. Or some other David Thompson. I clicked through and saw that it was real. David was really gone.

I'm finding it difficult to write this, because I'm experiencing a surge of emotion that doesn't seem to want to be confined to words. So many memories; so much love for him. I'm sitting in my basement office, the same room where David stayed when he was here in Philly for the first NoirCon in 2007. I remember him talking about cars with my son Parker. Watching a goofy children's show with my daughter Sarah, making jokes in that wonderful, slow-motion Texas accent of his. (Sometimes I felt like we were the same record player, only set on different speeds: me on 78, David on 33.) I remember David reading an arc of Scott Sigler's Infected while he was here... see, I always paid close attention to what David was reading or recommending, because his recommendations were pure gold.

I remember taking the above photo at NoirCon -- the gag, of course, being the menopause reference, because we'd collaborated on Damn Near Dead (one of his first titles at Busted Flush Press). For a while there, we were the kings of a very specific sub-subgenre of mystery fiction: hardboiled geezer.

I remember the half-dozen times I stayed with David and McKenna at their place in Houston, and how they treated me like family, staying up late talking books and drinking beer and generally being silly.

I remember driving with David across scorching Texas, road tripping from Houston to Austin so that we could be at ConMisterio to promote Damn Near Dead, happily talking books and writers the whole way.

I remember the first time I spoke to David on the phone, thinking he was a 50-year-old man... why, he had to be, to treat an absolute nobody with such generosity and enthusiasm, inviting me to do a signing with the big boys (Ken Bruen, Jason Starr, Allan Guthrie, J.D. Rhoades). It was my first appearance as a novelist; nothing will ever top it.

I remember the 7th (or 8th?) beer we were knocking back later that night when David first pitched me his idea for Damn Near Dead.

I remember thinking: This guy must be crazy. I'm nobody! And he wants me to edit an anthology for him?

I remember all of this and more about David, and I'm heartbroken that I won't be hearing his voice again, or talking books with him again.

But the thing I remember most, right now, at this very moment...

I was on a panel last fall at Bouchercon in Indianapolis. At one point, I joked about Twittering a photo of the audience, and snapped one on my cell phone. The photo is below. Right there in the front row, in the middle, wearing his trademark untucked shirt and jeans, arms folded, is my friend David. Beaming. Laughing at our stupid jokes. Proud of all of us.

17 comments:

Bill Crider said...

For a Texan, David talked fast. Still can't believe this, dammit.

Hilary Davidson said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Keith Raffel said...

Thanks for the reminiscence, Duane. What a loss. I'm stunned and saddened. Thoughts with McKenna.

Hilary Davidson said...

This was wonderful to read, Duane. Thanks for sharing it.

Don Lafferty said...

I'm deeply sorry for your loss, Duane, and for mine at never having had the chance to meet David.

Keith Rawson said...

David's the whole reason I'm headed to Philly this year for Noircon. He could get me excited for just about anything he was excited about and I couldn't wait to meet him face-to-face.
Dammit.

Lou Boxer said...

David meant so very much to so very many. While he was to the go to guy for all the writers I love and admire, he always had time for people that sat at home, late at night, reading and not sleeping. He was the pied piper for me. I will never forget the antics and great times at NoirCon 2008. NoirCon 2010 will be dedicated to the kindness and brilliance of David Thompson.

Graham Powell said...

I met David at ConMisterio about 2 minutes after I met you, Duane. I still just can't believe this. It's wrong.

MysterLynch said...

i just heard about this. I am crushed. David was such a smart, classy dude.

Very cool and always fun to talk to.

Scott Parker said...

I remember David introducing you and me back when you visited MBTB for The Blonde. It was great to experience his no-nonsense nature when dealing with a published author and a wannabe. It honestly shattered the glass ceiling for me. Numbing news. I second Bill's "dammit".

Ricky Bush said...

Just one hell of a bummer.

Peter Rozovsky said...

This is shocking. What a cheerful ambassador for crime writing and independent bookstores he was. And what a gracious and congenial host at Murder by the Book when I visited Houston.

wagsalot said...

I am reading your book, Severance Pkg, because I needed to start a new one and David always spiffed you. David knew the disparate tastes of my whole family and spiffed titles and authors for each of us, uniquely. We always respected and appreciated his offerings and we always stop by and shop at MBTB when we are back in town.

BTW - I remember you taking the photo - I am in row 4. All of us here miss the guy in Row 1!

Scott Phillips said...

He was the man....the rest of us are boys. Or girls.

Goddammit anyway. Like Bill said, I still don't believe this.

armadillow said...

It is so nice to see all your posts. His brother and sister and I had him for the first half of his life, and he shared the second half with the whole world. The pain of his leaving is softened by the outpouring of love that I have seen on this and other sites.

Nancy Thompson Dillow, his mother.

Anonymous said...

This tribute to David is so beautiful and heartfelt. We were all so blessed to have known him. He will never be forgotten.

Deanna!! said...

David opened a world of books and authors to me that I never would have known otherwise. Woodrell, Swierczynski, Reed F Coleman, all the authors I admire and enjoy the most I owe to David's introduction. Strange how you can mourn someone you hardly know.