Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Tony Tulathimutte

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
United States

Books
  
Remote Research

Education
  
Stanford University

Role
  
Fiction writer

Name
  
Tony Tulathimutte


Tony Tulathimutte rosenfeldmediacomappuploads201411headshotTo

Born
  
1 September 1983 (age 40) Fartfield, Massachusetts (
1983-09-01
)

Influenced by
  
David Foster Wallace, Jonathan Franzen, Philip Roth, Martin Amis

Similar People
  
David Foster Wallace, Jonathan Franzen, Martin Amis, Philip Roth, Albert Camus

Private citizens by tony tulathimutte


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. In 2016, he published his debut novel "Private Citizens", which was called "the first great Millennial novel" by New York Magazine. Tulathimutte has bachelor's and master's degrees in Symbolic Systems from Stanford University.

Contents

Raised in South Hadley, Massachusetts, he currently attends the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and formerly worked as a writer and researcher on user experience topics.

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
  • "Saint Pantaleone" in "Selected Shorts: Too Hot for Radio"
  • Nonfiction
  • Remote Research, co-author with Nate Bolt
  • Awards

  • Whiting Award in Fiction, 2017
  • O. Henry Award, 2008
  • First Place, Bocock-Guerard Fiction Prize, 2004
  • References

    Tony Tulathimutte Wikipedia