‘Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance’ author Pirsig dies at 88

Writer’s loosely autobiographical account of US roadtrip became a bestseller

Pirsig said the protagonist of Zen and the Art of Motorcyle Maintenance “set out to resolve the conflict between classic values that create machinery, such as a motorcycle, and romantic values, such as experiencing the beauty of a country road”
Pirsig said the protagonist of Zen and the Art of Motorcyle Maintenance “set out to resolve the conflict between classic values that create machinery, such as a motorcycle, and romantic values, such as experiencing the beauty of a country road”

Robert M Pirsig, author of the influential 1970s philosophical novel Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, died on Monday at the age of 88, his publisher said.

Pirsig’s wife Wendy had confirmed his death at his home in Maine “after a period of failing health”, said Peter Hubbard, executive editor at William Morrow & Co.

Published in 1974 after being rejected by more than 100 other publishers, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, was the father-son story of a motorcycle trip across the western US. Loosely autobiographical, it also contained flashbacks to a period in which the author was diagnosed as schizophrenic.

The book quickly became a bestseller. Pirsig said its protagonist “set out to resolve the conflict between classic values that create machinery, such as a motorcycle, and romantic values, such as experiencing the beauty of a country road”.

READ SOME MORE

Born in Minneapolis, Pirsig had a high IQ and graduated from high school aged 15. He earned a degree in philosophy and also worked as a technical writer and instructor of English before receiving hospital treatment for mental illness in the early 1960s.

His philosophical thinking and personal experiences during these years, including a 1968 motorcycle trip across the western US with his eldest son, Christopher, formed the core of the narrative of the novel.

Pirsig worked on the sequel, Lila: An Inquiry into Morals for 17 years before its publication in 1991. The story traced a boat journey taken by two fictitious characters along America's eastern coast.

Pirsig lived the last 30 years in South Berwick, Maine and is survived by his wife Wendy, two children and three grandchildren. His son Chris died in 1979.

Reuters