Kim Thompson – An Appreciation
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| Gary Groth (left) and Kim Thompson |
On Wednesday we noted the death at age 56 of Kim Thompson, co-publisher (with Gary Groth) of Fantagraphics Books, under whose
imprint we’ve graced the world with three Flora anthologies. (A fourth, The High Fidelity Art of Jim Flora, arrives in September.)
Kim served as the company’s editor and point
person for my (and Barb Economon‘s) Flora books. He conferred with
us and designer Laura Lindgren during development and production, ensured we met deadlines, proofread and edited the final manuscripts, and shepherded the books through the crucial printing
process. These tasks sound clerical, but without the involvement of Kim (and Gary), these books
would not exist. Book publishers—especially in the arts—don’t last 30+ years by luck; they endure because of leadership. Kim co-helmed the company, and the success of Fantagraphics depends
on artists and authors delivering quality material. Quality has to be nurtured, and sometimes imposed, from above. Kim and Gary held us to a high standard, and since we had immense respect for them—and for the reputation of the company they founded—we labored to meet their benchmark.
That our relationship with Fantagraphics has lasted ten years and a quartet of
books indicates we succeeded.
Kim would have supervised the development of The High Fidelity Art, but as research and writing ramped up
earlier this year, he was diagnosed with lung cancer. (Gary stepped in and oversaw the project.) We
received periodic reports from Kim’s wife, Lynn Emmert, while he was in treatment at Seattle’s Virginia Mason Hospital; some reports were upbeat, but the prognosis looked grim. On June 6, after five weeks of treatment, Kim returned home for hospice care.
In our communication (virtual, phone, face-to-face) over the years, Kim was a gentleman and a professional. He saw the big picture but
could focus intently on detail. Once we were two weeks late on a deadline. We apologized,
and his (paraphrased) response was, “Considering the deadlines chronically
and widely missed by so many of our artists and writers, ‘two weeks late’ is
early.”
We never got the sense Kim was doing his
“job”—he was doing what he loved, in a community of
colleagues who shared his passions. He was unusually talented and singularly
compelled—as such, perhaps something of an outsider. At Fantagraphics, he
co-created a universe where he was an insider. Many people segue into make-work careers to bag a salary and justify themselves with 35 or 40 hours of weekly
employment. That wasn’t Kim. He had a vision and a mission. He wasn’t at a desk; he co-piloted command central of an idiosyncratic publishing empire. Fantagraphics has
outlived Kim; so intense was his dedication, we suspect he would not have
contemplated the reverse.
We wish Gary the best, as he perseveres with the next generation of Fantagraphics staff, who are maintaining a legacy Kim co-founded. Gary has an energetic, committed
team, but Kim will be irreplaceable.
Kim and Gary were always supportive and cooperative. They let us make the books we wanted to make, with no editorial interference and only helpful suggestions. Because our new book will soon be off the presses, it’s too late to add a line of copy. So we’ll publish it here:


