Jim Thompson Popular Books

Jim Thompson Biography & Facts

James Harrison Wilson Thompson (March 21, 1906 – disappeared March 26, 1967; declared dead 1974) was an American businessman who helped revitalize the Thai silk industry in the 1950s and 1960s. At the time of his disappearance he was one of the most famous Americans living in Asia. Time magazine claimed he "almost singlehanded(ly) saved Thailand's vital silk industry from extinction". Early life Jim Thompson was born in Greenville, Delaware in 1906. He was the youngest of five children of Henry and Mary Wilson Thompson. His father was a wealthy textile manufacturer; his mother was the daughter of James Harrison Wilson (1837–1925), a noted Union general during the American Civil War. Thompson spent his early years of education at St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire. He graduated from Princeton University in 1928, and represented the United States in the 6-Metre Sailing event at the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Post-graduate studies followed at the University of Pennsylvania's School of Architecture, but he did not complete his degree at this institution due to his weakness in calculus. From 1931 to 1940, he practiced in New York City with Holden, McLaughlin & Associates, designing homes for the East Coast rich. During this period, he led an active social life and sat on the board of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. In 1941, he quit his job and enlisted with the Delaware National Guard. Before the outbreak of the Second World War, he was transferred to a military outpost in Fort Monroe, Virginia. While he was here, he got to know Second Lieutenant Edwin Fahey Black, a fresh graduate from the US Military Academy, West Point. It was Black who encouraged him to join the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the forerunner of the Central Intelligence Agency. World War II activities At the height of the Second World War, Thompson was recruited by Major General William Joseph Donovan (1883–1959) to serve as an operative in the OSS. His first assignment was with the French Resistance in North Africa. He was then sent to Europe. After Victory in Europe Day (May 7–8, 1945), he was transferred to Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) to work with the pro-Allied Free Thai Movement (Seri Thai). Their mission was to help liberate Thailand from the occupying Japanese Army. The group had the support of Pridi Panomyong, the regent to King Ananda Mahidol of Thailand, and Seni Pramoj, the Thai ambassador to the United States. In August 1945, Thompson was about to be sent into Thailand, when the surrender of Japan officially ended World War II. He arrived in Thailand shortly after Victory over Japan Day and organized the Bangkok OSS office. It was here he got to know Constance (Connie) Mangskau, an Allied Services translator, who later became one of his closest friends. In the spring of 1946, Thompson went to work as a military attaché at the United States legation for his former Princeton classmate Charles Woodruff Yost, the US Minister to Thailand. It was the start of Thompson's eleven year affair with Yost's wife, Irena. In 1950, she had a child, but neither Thompson nor Yost could establish paternity prior to DNA testing. Thompson used his contacts with the Free Thai and Free Laos (Lao Issara) groups to gather information and defuse conflicts on Thailand's borders. Working with him in the legation was Kenneth Landon, an American missionary whose wife, Margaret Landon, was the author of Anna and the King of Siam, which was the inspiration for the 1946 film of the same name, and the 1956 film The King and I. Return to private industry In late 1946, Thompson headed for home to seek his discharge from the army. After his divorce from Patricia Thraves (1920–1969), he returned to Thailand to join a group of investors to buy The Oriental Hotel in Bangkok. While working on its restoration, he had some differences with his associates and this resulted in him giving up his shares in the company. He subsequently switched his focus to silk trade. In 1948 he partnered with George Barrie to found the Thai Silk Company Limited. It was capitalized at $25,000. They each owned 18% of the shares, and the remaining 64% were sold to Thai and foreign investors. The firm achieved a coup in 1951 when designer Irene Sharaff made use of Thai silk fabrics for the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, The King and I. From then on, the company prospered. Besides inventing the bright jewel tones and dramatic color combinations today associated with Thai silk, Thompson raised thousands of Thailand's poorest people out of poverty. His determination to keep his company cottage-based was significant for the women who made up the bulk of his work force. By allowing them to work at home, they retained their position in the household while becoming breadwinners. It was only after Thompson's disappearance that the Thai Silk Company relocated its weaving operations to Korat, a city which serves as a base of operations for the Royal Thai Army. Although it abandoned home-based weaving in favor of factories in the early 1970s, the Thai Silk Company's facility in Amphoe Pak Thong Chai, Korat, presents itself more as a beautifully landscaped campus than a typical factory. Thompson's "House on the Klong" Thompson was unlike any other figure in Southeast Asia. He was an American, an ex-architect, a retired army officer, a one-time spy, a silk merchant and a renowned collector of antiques. Most of Thompson's treasures, if not all, were amassed after he came to Thailand. In 1958, Thompson began what was to be the pinnacle of his architectural achievement – the construction of a new home to showcase his objets d'art. Using parts of old up-country houses – some as old as a hundred years – Thompson succeeded in constructing a masterpiece that involved the reassembling of six Thai dwellings on his estate. Most of the units were dismantled and brought over by river from Ayutthaya, but the largest – a weaver's house (now the living room) – came from Bangkrua. On arrival, the woodwork was offloaded and pieced together. In his quest for authenticity, Thompson saw to it that some of the structures were elevated a full floor above the ground. During the construction stage, he added his own touches to the buildings by positioning, for instance, a central staircase indoors rather than having it outside. Along the way, Thompson also reversed the wall panels of his quarters so that it now faced inside instead of it having an external orientation. After Thompson was through with its creation, he filled his home with the items he had collected in the past. Decorating his rooms were Chinese blue-and-white Ming pieces, Belgian glass, Cambodian carvings, Victorian-era chandeliers, Benjarong earthenware, Thai stone images, Burmese statues, and a dining table which was once used by King Rama V of Thailand. Thompson dedicated nearly a year to the meticulous creation of his opulent mansion. Today, transformed into a museum, .... Discover the Jim Thompson popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Jim Thompson books.

Best Seller Jim Thompson Books of 2024

  • Cover Her Face synopsis, comments

    Cover Her Face

    P. D. James

    The first in the series of scintillating mysteries to feature cunning Scotland Yard detective, Adam Dalgliesh from P.D. James, the bestselling author hailed by People magazine as “...

  • Jayo synopsis, comments

    Jayo

    Jason Sherlock

    ‘It’s got to be said for the little man, give him a sniff at goal – and he is deadly.’ Jim GavinOne of the greatest Dublin players of the modern GAA era. A man who transcended the ...

  • The Pale House Devil synopsis, comments

    The Pale House Devil

    Richard Kadrey

    A gripping, snappy creature feature from the master of horror noir about two detectivesone dead, one livinghired by an embittered old landowner to banish a bloody cosmic monster fr...

  • America Noir synopsis, comments

    America Noir

    David Cochran

    In America Noir David Cochran details how ten writers and filmmakers challenged the social pieties prevalent during the Cold War, such as the superiority of the American democrac...

  • The January 6th Report synopsis, comments

    The January 6th Report

    Elizabeth Holtzman & Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the US Capitol

    The most important political investigation since Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s probe into Russian influence on the 2016 election of Donald J. Trump.   The full repo...

  • How to Coach Youth Baseball So Every Kid Wins synopsis, comments

    How to Coach Youth Baseball So Every Kid Wins

    Jeffrey Ourvan & Orlando Cepeda

    Coaching youth baseball is tough. Not only do coaches have to teach kids the fundamental skills of the game, they also have to know how to select a team, how to run efficient pract...

  • No Pain, No Gain synopsis, comments

    No Pain, No Gain

    James Baron

    No Pain, No Gain is a collection of short stories united around their narrator's search for satisfaction through sexual submission. The pseudonymous author, a filmindustry insider ...

  • Rest in Pieces synopsis, comments

    Rest in Pieces

    Bess Lovejoy

    A “marvelously macabre” (Kirkus Reviews) history of the bizarre afterlives of corpses of the celebrated and notorious dead.For some of the most influential figures in history, deat...

  • Madwoman On The Bridge And Other Stories synopsis, comments

    Madwoman On The Bridge And Other Stories

    Su Tong & Josh Stenberg

    Set during the fallout of the Cultural Revolution, these bizarre and delicate stories capture the collision of the old China of vanished dynasties, with communism and today's tiger...

  • Jim Thompson synopsis, comments

    Jim Thompson

    William Warren

    On Easter Day, 1967, American businessman and founder of the modern Thai silk industry James H.W. Thompson disappeared while supposedly on a stroll in the jungleclad Cameron Highla...

  • Difficult Lives Hitching Rides synopsis, comments

    Difficult Lives Hitching Rides

    James Sallis

    James Sallis's (Drive) seminal biographical essays on crime fiction pioneers Jim Thompson, David Goodis, and Chester Himes restored to print and joined by a handpicked collection o...

  • The January 6th Report synopsis, comments

    The January 6th Report

    Darren Beattie & Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the US Capitol

    The most important political investigation since Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s probe into Russian influence on the 2016 election of Donald J. Trump.   The full repo...

  • Shroud for a Nightingale synopsis, comments

    Shroud for a Nightingale

    P. D. James

    Hailed as “mystery at its best” by The New York Times, Shroud for a Nightingale is the fourth book in bestselling author P.D. James’s Adam Dalgliesh mystery series.The young women ...

  • The Lady with the Dog and Other Stories synopsis, comments

    The Lady with the Dog and Other Stories

    Anton Chekov

    In the final years of his life, Chekhov produced some of the stories that rank among his masterpieces, and some of the most highlyregarded works in Russian literature. Those storie...

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    Emotional and Behavioral Problems

    Paul Zionts, Laura Zionts & Richard L. Simpson

    A guide to teaching students with emotional and behavioral problems.

  • Legends of N.C. State Basketball synopsis, comments

    Legends of N.C. State Basketball

    Tim Peeler & Mark Gottfried

    The fever that is college basketball on Tobacco Road started from a small outbreak in Raleigh, North Carolina, when Indiana basketball legend Everett Case became the coach at N.C. ...

  • The Turn synopsis, comments

    The Turn

    Kim Harrison

    #1 New York Times bestselling author Kim Harrison returns to her beloved Hollows series with The Turnthe official prequel to the series that will introduce you to a whole new side ...

  • La casa de la noche synopsis, comments

    La casa de la noche

    Jo Nesbø

    El maestro del thriller moderno se adentra en el género de terror: una novela ambientada en los años ochenta, que nos sumerge en la frágil mente de un hombre con una juventud atorm...

  • Cambodia Noir synopsis, comments

    Cambodia Noir

    Nick Seeley

    A “sinuous, shattering thriller” (Booklist, starred review) with a heartstopping conclusion about a mysterious American woman who disappears in to the Cambodian underworld, and the...

  • The Ideal Man synopsis, comments

    The Ideal Man

    Joshua Kurlantzick

    How the West's greatest spy in Asia tried to stop the new American way of warand the steep price he paid for failingJim Thompson landed in Thailand at the end of World War II, a fo...

  • The Devil Himself synopsis, comments

    The Devil Himself

    Peter Farris

    For Fans of Brian Panowich and Ron Rash. Southern Noir at its finest, The Devil Himself, sizzles with pageburning suspense and bewitching characters. Deep in the forest o...

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    The Beauty of Discomfort

    Amanda Lang

    Why do some people drive change while others are blindsided by it? Why are some people able to adapt and thrive?How can we make change easier?Truly successful people don’t merely t...

  • Maximum Movies Pulp Fictions synopsis, comments

    Maximum Movies Pulp Fictions

    Peter Stanfield

    In the words of Richard Maltby . . . "Maximum MoviesPulp Fictions describes two improbably imbricated worlds and the piece of cultural history their intersections provoked." One of...

  • The Simple Art of Murder synopsis, comments

    The Simple Art of Murder

    Raymond Chandler

    The renowned novel from crime fiction master Raymond Chandler, with the "quintessential urban private eye" (Los Angeles Times), Philip Marlowe  Featuring the iconic character ...

  • Make it a Double synopsis, comments

    Make it a Double

    Shelley Sackier

    A witty and immersive look at the history, mythology, science, and magical touch that makes whisky taste like a drop of gold. Braving the “all boys” clubhouse of the...

  • 50 Guns That Changed the World synopsis, comments

    50 Guns That Changed the World

    Robert A. Sadowski

    Discover how fifty great firearms influenced and helped shape our world.World history has always been interwoven with developments in firearms technology and so is peppered with le...