GEORGE JONES SPENT EIGHT DAYS IN A COMA AFTER WRAPPING HIS LEXUS AROUND A BRIDGE. WHEN HE WOKE UP, HE WASN’T ASKING FOR WHISKEY ANYMORE — HE WAS SINGING HYMNS. “He never touched another bottle.” It was March 6, 1999. Highway 96 near Franklin, Tennessee. The man country fans had been calling “No Show Jones” for two decades — the drunk, the brawler, the husband Tammy Wynette finally walked away from in 1975 — lost control on a curve and hit a concrete bridge abutment. Collapsed lung. Ruptured liver. No seatbelt. They found a vodka bottle under the passenger seat. Nancy, his fourth wife, sat by his bed for eight days. When his eyes finally opened, he wasn’t cursing or asking for a drink. He was humming gospel songs and asking for a woman named Vestal Goodman — a singer he had only met months before. Fourteen more years. One last Grammy in 1999 for a song called “Choices.” But the line Vestal whispered to him in that hospital room — the one Nancy says changed everything — has never been written down.
George Jones, the Crash, and the Hymns That Followed On March 6, 1999, George Jones was driving along Highway 96 near Franklin, Tennessee, when his Lexus left the road and…