Pubdate: Mon, 21 Feb 2005 Source: Journal Times, The (Racine, WI) Copyright: 2005 The Journal Times Contact: http://www.journaltimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1659 Author: Rachel Campbell http://www.mapinc.org/people/Hunter+S.+Thompson GONZO MONDAY Well, my hero is dead. Happy Monday, everybody. Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, whom I cribbed a column title from last week much to the delight of my readers, reportedly killed himself via shotgun Sunday at his home in Woody Creek, Colorado. He was 67. (Or 65, depending on what obit you read.) I am shocked. This seems to come out of nowhere. Not, of course, that I knew the guy or anything: He was one of those people I'd hoped that maybe, if I worked hard enough and went to the wrong parties, I would get to meet someday; maybe buy him a beer, shake his hand, and try not to make an utter ass of myself in the process. In fact, not many people get to say they really knew Dr. Thompson at this point, as he was extremely private on a personal level - although very prolific publicly, writing books, the occasional story for Rolling Stone, and regularly columnizing for ESPN.com. No Salinger, he. In fact, his latest column was published only five days before he killed himself - and titled, let the history books show, "Shotgun Gold with Bill Murray." (Click http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/archive?columnist=hunter_s._thompson&root=page2 for the ESPN.com archives of Thompson's column, "Hey Rube.") Was it an accident? Please? After all, the good doctor was a passionate gun collector. But it doesn't look that way: According to the statement issued to the press by his son, Juan Thompson, "Dr. Hunter S. Thompson took his life with a gunshot to the head." This is an observation that the Pitkin County Sheriff's department has, thus far anyway, confirmed. And so Hunter S. Thompson joins Hemingway, Plath, Woolf, Toole, and countless other writers-cum-suicides. His books and the film "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" will become best-sellers on Amazon, eBay, and BarnesandNoble.com today; and you know someone is sketching Hopper's "Nighthawks" as we speak, perhaps substituting Thompson for the guy sitting off by himself at the counter - where James Dean ended up in the "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" version. So I guess, if I feel anything about it, it's an as-yet-unspecified emotion somewhere between being heartbroken and being livid. As I type this, I'm casting occasional glances at a picture of Thompson from Rolling Stone I have taped up at my desk, and I'm absolutely furious. But that will probably change. Thompson-induced states of mind are nothing if not volatile. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth