Tony Tulathimutte | |
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Born | Springfield, Massachusetts | 1 September 1983
Website | |
tonytula |
Tony Tulathimutte (born September 1, 1983) is an American fiction writer. His short story "Scenes from the Life of the Only Girl in Water Shield, Alaska" received an O. Henry Award in 2008.[1] In 2016, he published his debut novel Private Citizens, which was called "the first great Millennial novel" by New York Magazine.[2] Tulathimutte has bachelor's and master's degrees in Symbolic Systems from Stanford University.
Raised in South Hadley, Massachusetts, he is a graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and formerly worked as a writer and researcher on user experience topics.[3] Currently he is the lead instructor at CRIT, a creative writing workshop based in Brooklyn, NY.[4]
Works
- Fiction
- “Composite Body” in Cimarron Review
- "Inheritance" in Threepenny Review
- "Brains", novella in Malahat Review
- "The Man Who Wasn't Male" in Wag's Revue
- "Scenes from the Life of the Only Girl in Water Shield, Alaska" (corrected text) in Threepenny Review
- "The Feminist" in n+1
- "Ahegao" in The Paris Review
- Nonfiction
Awards
References
- ↑ The O. Henry Prize Stories 2008
- ↑ Tulathimutte, Tony (2016-02-09). Private Citizens: A Novel. William Morrow Paperbacks. ISBN 9780062399106.
- ↑ "Tony Tulathimutte Archive". User Experience Magazine. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
- ↑ "The Instructor". CRIT. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
External links
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