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Jim Thompson (1) (1906–1977)

Author of The Killer Inside Me

For other authors named Jim Thompson, see the disambiguation page.

58+ Works 14,616 Members 324 Reviews 67 Favorited

About the Author

American novelist and screenwriter Jim Thompson was born in Anadarko, Oklahoma on September 27, 1906. In Fort Worth, Texas during prohibition, he worked as a bellboy at the Hotel Texas for two years where he earned up to $300 a week by supplying hotel patrons with bootleg liquor, heroin, and show more marijuana. During the Depression, he worked with the Oklahoma Federal Writers Project and was a member of the Communist Party from 1935 to 1938. During World War II, he worked at an aircraft factory where he was investigated by the FBI for his Communist Party affiliation. His first novel, Now and on Earth, was published in 1942. He wrote more than thirty novels during his lifetime and most of them were paperback pulp crime novels. His best known works are The Killer Inside Me, Savage Night, A Hell of a Woman, and Pop. 1280. In 1955, he moved to Hollywood, California to write screenplays with Stanley Kubrick. Thompson helped write The Killing and Paths of Glory. He died after a series of strokes in Los Angeles, California on April 7, 1977. His long-time alcoholism and recent self-inflicted starvation contributed to his death. His death attracted little attention because none of his novels were in print in the U.S. at that time. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Jim Thompson nr.1 Foto: Sharon Thompson Reed

Series

Works by Jim Thompson

The Killer Inside Me (1952) — Author — 2,644 copies, 96 reviews
Pop. 1280 (1964) 1,497 copies, 42 reviews
The Grifters (1963) 1,325 copies, 29 reviews
The Getaway (1959) 1,030 copies, 22 reviews
After Dark, My Sweet (1955) — Author — 768 copies, 15 reviews
A Hell of a Woman (1954) 709 copies, 16 reviews
Savage Night (1953) 547 copies, 10 reviews
A Swell-Looking Babe (1954) 451 copies, 6 reviews
Nothing More Than Murder (1949) 392 copies, 7 reviews
The Kill-Off (1957) 353 copies, 3 reviews
The Nothing Man (1954) 337 copies, 7 reviews
The Alcoholics (1953) — Author — 325 copies, 6 reviews
Wild Town (1957) 314 copies, 6 reviews
The Criminal (1953) 305 copies, 3 reviews
Recoil (1953) 296 copies, 4 reviews
Bad Boy (1953) — Author — 288 copies, 2 reviews
Cropper's Cabin (1952) 267 copies, 3 reviews
Texas by the Tail (1990) 255 copies, 3 reviews
South of Heaven (1967) 252 copies, 3 reviews
Now and On Earth (1942) 245 copies, 4 reviews
Roughneck (1989) 235 copies, 6 reviews
Paths of Glory [1957 film] (1957) — Screenwriter — 227 copies, 5 reviews
The Rip-Off (1989) 214 copies, 2 reviews
The Golden Gizmo (1954) 213 copies, 1 review
The Transgressors (1986) 174 copies, 6 reviews
Heed the Thunder (1946) — Author — 165 copies, 4 reviews
King Blood (Armchair Detective Library) (1973) — Author — 152 copies, 1 review
The Killing [1956 film] (1956) — Screenwriter — 133 copies, 3 reviews
Fireworks: The Lost Writings (1988) 101 copies, 1 review
Hardcore (1986) 61 copies
Child of Rage (1988) 55 copies, 1 review
Ironside (1994) 30 copies, 1 review
More Hard Core: 3 Novels (1987) 22 copies
Vita da niente (1990) 13 copies
Jim Thompson's The Killer Inside Me (2017) 13 copies, 2 reviews
Forever After (2009) 7 copies
Vite in gioco (1993) 6 copies
Asesino Burlon (1988) 5 copies, 1 review
Oltre il buio (1992) 4 copies
Nothing But a Man (1970) 4 copies
Una chica de buen ver (1954) 4 copies
El embrollo (1989) 3 copies, 1 review
Una cabaña en el sur (1989) 2 copies, 1 review
La cabane du métayer (2019) 2 copies
Os caloteiros (2013) 2 copies
ROMANZI 1 copy

Associated Works

Crime Novels : American Noir of the 1950s (1997) — Contributor — 589 copies, 7 reviews
The Best American Noir of the Century (2010) — Contributor — 432 copies, 8 reviews
Murder on Amsterdam Avenue (2015) — Author photo, some editions — 252 copies, 16 reviews
The Mammoth Book of Pulp Fiction (1996) — Contributor — 245 copies, 4 reviews
The Black Lizard Anthology of Crime Fiction (1987) — Contributor — 241 copies, 2 reviews
Hard-Boiled: An Anthology of American Crime Stories (1995) — Contributor — 202 copies, 6 reviews
Pulp Fictions (1996) — Contributor — 74 copies, 3 reviews
Unusual Suspects: A New Anthology of Crime Stories from Black Lizard (1996) — Contributor — 39 copies, 1 review
Stories for Men (2010) — Contributor — 36 copies
City Sleuths and Tough Guys: Crime Stories from Poe to the Present (1989) — Contributor — 32 copies, 1 review
The New Black Mask Quarterly (Number 4) (1986) — Contributor — 18 copies
The New Windmill Book of Stories from Different Genres (1998) — Contributor — 8 copies
The Damned (1954) — Contributor — 4 copies, 1 review

Tagged

20th century (108) Already read (63) American (114) American literature (183) calibre (101) crime (827) crime and mystery (124) crime fiction (500) Detective and mystery stories (51) ebook (203) fiction (1,221) General (95) hardboiled (388) Jim Thompson (103) Kindle (57) literature (59) murder (59) mystery (615) Mystery & Detective (95) noir (668) novel (276) policier (59) pulp (106) pulp fiction (117) read (137) suspense (145) Texas (53) thriller (156) to-read (1,025) USA (83)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Thompson, Jim
Legal name
Thompson, James Myers
Other names
Dillon, James
Birthdate
1906-09-27
Date of death
1977-04-07
Gender
male
Education
University of Oklahoma
University of Nebraska
Occupations
novelist
screenwriter
journalist
bellboy
oil field laborer
Organizations
Oklahoma Federal Writers Project
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW. The Wobblies)
Communist Party USA (1935-38)
Short biography
James Myers Thompson was a United States writer of novels, short stories and screenplays, largely in the hardboiled style of crime fiction.

Thompson wrote more than thirty novels, the majority of which were original paperback publications by pulp fiction houses, from the late-1940s through mid-1950s. Despite some positive critical notice, notably by Anthony Boucher in the New York Times, he was little-recognized in his lifetime. Only after death did Thompson's literary stature grow, when in the late 1980s, several novels were re-published in the Black Lizard series of re-discovered crime fiction.

Thompson's writing culminated in a few of his best-regarded works: The Killer Inside Me, Savage Night, A Hell of a Woman and Pop. 1280. In these works, Thompson turned the derided pulp genre into literature and art, featuring unreliable narrators, odd structure, and surrealism.

The writer R.V. Cassills has suggested that of all pulp fiction, Thompson's was the rawest and most harrowing; that neither Dashiell Hammett nor Raymond Chandler nor even Horace McCoy, author of the bleak They Shoot Horses, Don't They?, ever "wrote a book within miles of Thompson". [1] Similarly, in the introduction to Now and on Earth, Stephen King says he most admires Thompson's work because "The guy was over the top. The guy was absolutely over the top. Big Jim didn't know the meaning of the word stop. There are three brave lets inherent in the forgoing: he let himself see everything, he let himself write it down, then he let himself publish it."

Thompson admired Fyodor Dostoevsky and was nicknamed "Dimestore Dostoevsky" by writer Geoffrey O'Brien. Film director Stephen Frears, who directed an adaptation of Thompson's The Grifters as 1990's The Grifters, also identified elements of Greek tragedy in his themes.
Cause of death
stroke
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Anadarko, Oklahoma Territory, USA
Places of residence
Anadarko, Oklahoma, USA (birth)
Los Angeles, California, USA (death)
Fort Worth, Texas, USA
Place of death
Los Angeles, California, USA
Burial location
cremated, ashes scattered
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

345 reviews
A dark, unglamorous crime novel that doesn’t even attempt to portray crime as something that pays.

The falsely personable, but deeply nihilistic Doc McCoy, his wife Carol, and partner Rudy Torrento, “paranoid; incredibly sharp of instinct; filled with animal cunning” rob a bank and attempt a getaway to Mexico. The betrayals start immediately; no one is exempt. There are plenty of murders and close calls.

Thompson wrote a stunning thriller and morality tale rolled into one.
After Dark, My Sweet is a 1955 American crime novel written by Jim Thompson. William Collins is a former boxer now drifter who has broken out of a mental hospital. In a roadhouse he meets a woman who in turn introduces him to her “Uncle” Bud. They lure him into joining them in the kidnapping of a young boy from a wealthyfamily. Collins is neurotic, jumpy and paranoid but, it appears, with good reason. Has he been brought into this to become the fall guy and are they planning on ever show more returning the child?

Dark and gritty, filled with completely unredeemable characters, After Dark, My Sweet is short, concise and highly readable. Collins is an unreliable narrator and his paranoia and prevalence for violence keeps the reader on edge with the knowledge that this story will not end well. Awash in alcohol and double crosses this kidnap-gone-wrong tale is an excellent noir from one of it’s masters.
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½
For some reason, local sheriff Lou Ford releases Bugs McKenna from jail and gets him a job at the nicest hotel in town as the house detective. Bugs can't stop wondering why Ford would do that for a stranger, one with a police record of violence, but he quickly begins to suspect that the smiling, drawling sheriff has a plan that needs a fall guy.

If you're like me and discovered Thompson through The Killer Inside Me, you'll be thrilled to find that he's plucked some of his characters from that show more amazing book and dropped them here. While this isn't a sequel, Lou Ford is again the creepy sheriff of a small Texas town and he is again engaged to sweet Amy and messing around with Joyce the Hooker ( her status is just slightly more elevated in this go-round), but the book is narrated by nervous Bugs, who just knows that somebody and everybody is out to get him.
Everything Thompson wrote oozes gritty noir.
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½
Welcome to Jim Thompson's twisted world. Thompson was one of the greatest of the 1950's pulp writers. But, Thompson wrote differently than almost anyone else at that time. His books are often narrated by grifters, conmen, and psychopaths. Often, as in "Killer Inside Me," the world doesn't realize that their local deputy is the nastiest psychopath they ever dreamed of. In his 1955 novel, "After Dark, My Sweet," the narrator is Kid Collins, a one-time boxing phenom, who left the ring after he show more punched one opponent so hard that the guy never got up again. Collins drifted from job to job, town to town, prison to prison, psych ward to psych ward, and, as this novel begins, he has escaped from his latest mental hospital. He knows he is nuts and can't stand everyone making fun of him (or is he just paranoid). On the way, he meets an older lush who he can't keep his eyes off of (Faye) and a troubled ex-cop (Uncle Bud) who just happen to be planning a kidnapping and need a sucker to play the fall guy.

The plot isn't filled with too many twists and turns, but what is wonderful here is Thompson's writing, which takes you inside the thinking of a guy who hasn't got all his marbles to begin with. There are, of course, those who are convinced the whole thing is a con on Kid Collins' part, but even cuckoos have moments where they think they are sane.

The world in Thompson's novel is dark and dreary. No one is picking up a hitchhiker. The bartender "slops" down a beer in front of Collins. Collins, even sitting in the bar having a drink, feels that old feeling creeping up on him. His eyes begin to burn He can't just walk away, but he can't get them to stop needling him.

As to Fay, Collins says his first impression was that she was just a female barfly who hit the booze too hard. But then he decided she was pretty, she'd just led a hard life for too long. And sometimes she could act as nice as she looked, but that's except when her claws came out and she started needling him and pushing him.

The whole story seems somewhat twisted, including the nutty kidnapping plot and dealing with the sick kidnapped kid, but its all told from Collins point of view and his world is warped and crazy and he doesn't trust anyone at all, not even Fay, not even Uncle Bud, not even the friendly doctor who wants to take him in.

Maybe today there are any number of books told from a warped point of view, but few did it back in the mid-1950's and one can only imagine what it was like back then coming across one of Thompson's books and not knowing what you were getting into. The cover blurb about "twisted lives and tormented loves" doesn't really give an inkling about where this thin volume takes the reader. Enjoy.
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Lists

Awards

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Associated Authors

Calder Willingham Screenwriter
Stanley Kubrick Screenwriter
John Shirley Foreword
Kirwan Cover artist, Cover Art
Barry Gifford Introduction
Gerald Fried Composer
Stephen Peringer Cover artist
Humphrey Cobb Original novel
Georg Krause Cinematographer
Kem Dibbs Actor
Jay Adler Actor
Lionel White Original novel
Lucien Ballard Cinematographer
Nancy MacGregor Cover artist
Attilio Veraldi Translator
Anna Martini Translator
Luca Briasco Contributor, Translator
Joe R. Lansdale Introduction
Guido Almansi Afterword
Wolfram Knorr Afterword
Andre Simonoviescz Übersetzer
Eduardo Feito Illustrator
Mika Tiirinen Translator
Marcel Duhamel Translator
Klaus Timmermann Übersetzer
Günter Panske Translator
Lia Volpatti Introduction
ferenc pinter Cover artist
Carlo Oliva Translator
Stephen King Introduction
F. Ron Miller Cover designer
Connor Willumsen Cover artist
Roderick Thorp Introduction

Statistics

Works
58
Also by
17
Members
14,616
Popularity
#1,574
Rating
3.8
Reviews
324
ISBNs
615
Languages
18
Favorited
67

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