Hubert Selby Jr, the acclaimed US author of Last Exit to Brooklyn and Requiem for a Dream, has died of a lung disease, his wife said. He was 75.
Selby died of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease yesterday at his home in the Highland Park section of Los Angeles, said his wife of 35 years, Suzanne.
Born in New York City, Selby’s experience among Brooklyn’s gritty longshoremen, homeless and the down-and-out formed the basis for his lauded 1964 novel, Last Exit to Brooklyn, which was made into a film in 1989.
Suzanne Selby said her late husband was kind and generous but in recent years suffered from depression and occasionally would launch into rages.
“He screamed, he yelled, he broke things,” she said. “But he did not have rages when he was writing.”
Selby shared screenwriting credit on the 2000 film version of his 1978 novel, Requiem for a Dream, a harrowing look inside a family’s many addictions.
His other novels include The Room (1971), The Demon (1976) and The Willow Tree (1998).
A collection of short stories, Song of the Silent Snow, was published in 1986.
Selby continued to work on screenplays and teach until he was admitted to hospital last month.
He had been in and out of the hospital in recent weeks and died with his wife by his side, she said.
He contracted tuberculosis as a child and had suffered from breathing problems ever since, Suzanne Shelby said.
He was diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease several years ago.
Selby often wrote at an apartment he kept in west Hollywood.
He worked in a bedroom there for at least five hours most days, and always left one line unfinished at night to have a place to start the next morning, Suzanne Selby said.
She said that he had battled addictions, but while much of his work dealt with the topic, he always wrote while sober and had not had any alcohol or any drugs since 1969.
Along with his wife, he is survived by four children and 11 grandchildren.