He was one of five sons and a daughter born to William Thomas Phillips, a farmer of English descent, and Ollie Fare Phillips, a schoolteacher with Scottish and Irish ancestry. The family moved in the 1940s to Kossuth so that the children might gain a better education.[2][3]
After schooling in Kossuth, Phillips attended Hinds Junior College.[4]
Phillips's first novel – The Bitterweed Path – was first published in hardback in 1950 by Rinehart & Company and was advertised, at the time, as "something new in the literature dealing with man's love for man ... in a period when even psychologists knew little of such matters, and people in small towns knew nothing."[citation needed] The book depicts the struggles of two gay men in the Southern United States at the turn of the 20th century, and how an unconventional love triangle involving these two men, and one of their fathers, impacts their three marriages in small-town, Deep South. The book's theme was notable in an era of repression, and even more so for coming from a particularly repressive state.[6][7]
Phillips, for whom Corinth-based writer Henry Dalton was a mentor,[4] was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for work in fiction in 1953 and again in 1956.[8] His next four books, including another – Kangaroo Hollow – that had a queer theme, were less successful than the first, even though they were well-received by literary critics.[7] These literary efforts had been in part subsidised by his investment in his brother Frank's trucking business.[2]
By the late 1950s, he had given up writing novels[7] and did not return to the field until 2002, when Red Midnight was published.[6]
Politics
Around 1958-1960,[a] Phillips was appointed to the Mississippi Public Service Commission to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of his younger brother, attorneyRubel Phillips. He resigned that post in 1963 so that he could help Rubel in what proved to be an unsuccessful Republicangubernatorial campaign.[4] Phillips managed that campaign and another unsuccessful attempt by Rubel in 1967.[6] However, Jan Stuart says that Thomas wrote speeches and literature for Rubel but was himself a "dyed-in-the-wool" Democrat:
To the young Tom, Franklin Delano Roosevelt was God. He would later admire, if not exalt, JFK, Jimmy Carter and, despite the blotch of scandal and impeachment, William Jefferson Clinton.[2]
Phillips, who never married,[7] spent much of his post-military life living alternately between California and Corinth, where he usually resided at the Phillips Brothers Truck Stop that he and Frank had opened in 1960.[4] He died on April 3, 2007, in Kossuth, aged 84.[6]
^ abcdefChartier, Courtney (2017). "Phillips, Thomas Hal". In Ownby, Ted; Wilson, Charles Reagan; Abadie, Ann J.; Lindsey, Odie; Thomas, James G. (eds.). The Mississippi Encyclopedia. University Press of Mississippi. p. 993. ISBN978-1-4968-1159-2.