Author Edmund White

Edmund White, a pioneering author who chronicled gay life and thumbed his own sexual experiences for literature that was at times arrestingly candid, died Tuesday. He was 85.

White's agent, Bill Clegg, told USA TODAY June 4 that the author had died June 3 in his New York City home of natural causes. White was diagnosed with H.I.V. in 1985 and survived multiple strokes and a heart attack, continuing to add ink to his prolific literary catalogue even in his later years.

"We're so deeply saddened by the news of Edmund White's passing," Bloomsbury, the publishing house responsible for many of his titles, wrote in a statement to USA TODAY June 4. "Ed's career was monumental—he wrote some of (the) bravest and most stylish books of the last fifty years."

"Ed wrote unabashedly about gay life and love, becoming a queer literary icon to generations of readers. He was a great flaneur, a wicked satirist, a connoisseur of human vulnerability who stayed connected and contemporary well into his eighties," the statement continued. "He was a mentor and friend to so many countless writers, and his work continues to find new readers. He’ll shape the literary landscape for years to come."

With a singular voice, White wrote honestly about the queer experience – his 1980 work "States of Desire: Travels in Gay America" becoming a tome for an oppressed but vibrant culture just before the AIDS epidemic befell it.

In "The Joy of Gay Sex: An Intimate Guide for Gay Men to the Pleasures of a Gay Life," White proved himself unafraid of going where few authors at that time had gone before. Collaborating with Dr. Charles Silverstein, he penned a literal how-to for intimate gay life, cracking open a conversation taking place off the page all over America.

"To see Ed was to bask in his smile, warmth, and sometimes his delightful wickedness; to read him was to relish his honesty, wit, and irreverence," Callie Garnett, the Editorial Director of Fiction and Memoir at Bloomsbury, wrote in a statement to USA TODAY June 4. "We will miss him terribly."

Born in 1940, White, a native son of the Midwest, eventually sojourned to New York City, where he sharpened his pen and trained a keen eye on a place that was becoming the center of gay life in the U.S.

In 1982, shortly before he was diagnosed as H.I.V. positive, White co-founded and served as the inaugural president of the Gay Men's Health Crisis, a collective care unit aimed at advocacy amid the AIDS epidemic. He moved to France the following year, eventually returning to the U.S. in the late '90s.

According to Clegg, White is survived by his husband and fellow author Michael Carroll, whom he married in 2013, and his older sister Margaret Fleming.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Edmund White death: Prolific writer behind 'A Boy's Own Story' dead at 85

Reporting by Anna Kaufman, USA TODAY / USA TODAY

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