JON FERGUSON is not your everyday philosopher. He is,
though—very decidedly—your philosopher of everyday. In his
earnest and ironic way, he wants to know what makes things tick
and he does that by studying the simple things of life, like his
wife, his children, his dog, what he’s eating, and also,
basketball, since he’s spent most of his 40-plus years playing
or coaching it. Born in 1949 in Oakland, California, Ferguson
graduated from Brigham Young University (fierce sports
stronghold) in 1971 with a degree in sociology and a minor in
philosophy and political science. He went to take philosophy
courses at Berkeley to see if they were thinking any better than
they did at BYU, but he decided they weren’t and he decided
not to do the doctorate in “philosophical anthropology” that
he had dreamed about. But he didn’t quit dreaming.
In 1973, Jon Ferguson went to Switzerland to make a living as
a professional basketball player. Twenty-four years later,
he’s still there—playing and coaching basketball, teaching
English, raising a family, painting, writing books and still
searching for the meaning of being in the midst of life’s
smallest things. In 1995, Editions Ozalide (Lausanne) published
the quirky Les Meillures Moments de Schmaltz (The Best Moments
of Schmaltz); in 1996 Editions L’Age d’Homme (Lausanne)
published Nietzsche au Petiti Dejeuner (Nietzsche for
Breakfast). Both books have enjoyed great success in Europe.
Cinco Puntos Press is honored to publish Ferguson’s next
philosophical musings, Farley’s Jewel, his first work in
English and his first to be published in the United States.