Following the war Chamales married his first wife Constance with whom he had two children, Thomas and Gerald. He worked in the hotel industry in the Commercial Hotel in
Yakima, Washington which his father had purchased, but Chamales desired to be a writer. He was befriended by
James Jones in the
Handy Writers' Colony in
Marshall, Illinois. Lowney Turner Handy, the founder of the school said he was the only student she ever had who could turn out almost perfect entire chapters where she'd have to do very little editing. As soon as Chamales wrote it, his work was ready to go to the publisher. His first novel
Never So Few based on his war experiences was published in 1957 with MGM obtaining the film rights for the novel in November 1956. According to Lowney Turner Handy, MGM paid US$300,000 for the film rights, four times the price of James Jones'
From Here to Eternity. Chamales divorced his first wife Constance in 1957 in a
Mexican divorce and married singer
Helen O'Connell less than a month after Helen and Tom met each other. The two had a daughter, Helen Maria Chamales. In 1959 Chamales published his second novel about the struggles of a World War II veteran, son of a wealthy
Greek immigrant. Whilst still in the
galley proof stage, MGM changed the title from
No Rent in His Hand to the more lurid
Go Naked in the World. The property was
filmed by MGM in 1961 also starred
Gina Lollobrigida with
Tony Franciosa. ==Death==