T._CORAGHESSAN_BOYLE

(Redirected from T.C. Boyle)

'T. Coraghessan Boyle' (also known as 'T.C. Boyle', born 'Thomas John Boyle' on December 2, 1948) is a U.S. novelist and short story writer. Since the late 1970s, he has published eleven novels and more than 60 short stories. He won the PEN/Faulkner award in 1988 for his third novel, ''World's End'', which recounts 300 years in upstate New York. He is married with three children. Since 1986, Boyle has been Professor of English at the University of Southern California.

Contents
Biography
Works
Bibliography
Novels
Short story collections
Chronology in Boyle's works
External links

Biography


Thomas John Boyle was born December 2, 1948 in Peekskill, New York. He grew up in the small town on the Hudson Valley that he regularly fictionalizes as Peterskill (as in widely anthologized short story Greasy Lake). Boyle changed his middle name when he was 17 and exclusively used Coraghessan for much of his career, but now also goes by T.C. Boyle.
Boyle earned a BA in English and history from the State University of New York at Potsdam in 1968, after which he taught for four years at the high school in his home town where his mother worked as head secretary and his father as janitor. After being accepted to the Iowa Writers' Workshop in 1972, Boyle served as fiction editor for the ''Iowa Review'' and in 1977 first received a Creative Writing Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts and in 1988 a Guggenheim. Boyle has since received many literary awards - - including the PEN/Faulkner Award, the PEN/Malamud Prize, the PEN/West Literary Prize, the Commonwealth Gold Medal for Literature, National Academy of Arts and Letters Award for prose excellence as well as six O. Henry Awards for short fiction, multiple Best American Short Story awards and ''Drop City'' is a National Book Award Finalist.
Boyle earned his MFA from the Iowa Writers' Workshop in 1974 and his Ph.D. degree in 19th century British literature in 1977. He has been a member of the English Department at the University of Southern California since 1978, and currently lives in Santa Barbara with his wife and three children.

Works


Many of Boyle's novels and short stories explore the Baby Boom generation, its appetites, joys, and addictions. Boyle’s themes, such as the often-misguided efforts of the male hero and the slick appeal of the anti-hero, appear alongside brutal satire, humor, and magic realism. As well, Boyle’s fiction explores the ruthlessness and the unpredictability of nature and the toll human society unwittingly takes on the environment. Boyle's work has been compared to Mark Twain's for its mixture of humor and social exploration.
His novels include ''World's End'' (1987, winner of the Pen/Faulkner Award for Fiction); ''The Road to Wellville'' (1993); and ''The Tortilla Curtain'' (1995, winner of France's Prix Medicis Etranger). Boyle is also one of America's most accomplished short story writers and has published eight collections, including ''Descent of Man'' (1979), ''Greasy Lake'' (1985), ''If the River was Whiskey'' (1989), and ''Without a Hero'' (1994). His short stories regularly appear in the major American magazines, including ''The New Yorker'', ''Harper's'', ''Esquire magazine'', ''The Atlantic Monthly'' and ''Playboy''.
Renowned for the thorough research he carries out, Boyle has, in the opinion of some literary critics, given new impetus to the historical novel by spinning bizarre and funny yarns around historical events. For example, ''Riven Rock,'' set in 1920s America, is about contemporary treatment for insanity as well as the emerging feminist movement. Similarly, ''The Road to Wellville'' features John Harvey Kellogg, inventor of the corn flake and peanut butter, as a quack doctor at a turn-of-the-century health spa; a later novel, ''Drop City,'' is set in 1970 and deals with the often contradictory aims and promises of the hippie movement.
Boyle’s latest novel, an identity-theft literary thriller, ''Talk Talk,'' is currently in production at Universal Pictures. Despite the contemporary qualities of his fiction, to date only one film has been made from Boyle’s work: 1994’s ''The Road to Wellville'', starring Anthony Hopkins, John Cusack and Matthew Broderick. In 2006, two new projects had T. C. Boyle's name attached: ''Achates McNeil,'' being screenwritten by Donald Margulies, and The ''Tortilla Curtain,'' starring Kevin Costner. ''Kinsey'', a 2004 semi-biographical film starring Liam Neeson as Alfred Kinsey and Laura Linney as his wife Clara, is seen by some as a companion piece to Boyle’s novel ''The Inner Circle''.

Bibliography


Novels


★ ''Water Music'' (1982)

★ ''Budding Prospects'' (1984)

★ ''World's End'' (1987)

★ ''East Is East'' (1990)

★ ''The Road to Wellville'' (1993)

★ ''The Tortilla Curtain'' (1995)

★ ''Riven Rock'' (1998)

★ ''A Friend of the Earth'' (2000)

★ ''Drop City'' (2003)

★ ''The Inner Circle'' (2004)

★ ''Talk Talk'' (2006)
Short story collections


★ ''Descent of Man'' (1979)

★ ''Greasy Lake'' (1985)

★ ''If the River Was Whiskey'' (1989)

★ ''Without a Hero'' (1994)

★ ''T.C. Boyle Stories'' (1998)

★ ''After the Plague'' (2001)

★ ''Tooth and Claw'' (2005)

★ ''The Human Fly'' (2005, young adult literature)
Chronology in Boyle's works

 TimeSettingHistorical personage in the novel
''World's End'' (1987)Late 17th century, 1949 and 1968Northern Westchester County near Peekskill, New York
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''Water Music'' (1982)1795London, Scotland, and Africa (source of the Niger)Mungo Park
''The Road to Wellville'' (1993)1907Battle Creek, MichiganJohn Harvey Kellogg
''Riven Rock'' (1998)1905-1925Montecito, Santa Barbara County, CaliforniaStanley McCormick, Katharine McCormick
''The Inner Circle'' (2004)1940s-50sBloomington, IndianaAlfred Kinsey
''Drop City'' (2003)1970California, Alaska
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''Budding Prospects'' (1984)1980sCalifornia
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''East Is East'' (1990)1980sGeorgia (American South)Hu Tu Mei
''The Tortilla Curtain'' (1995)1990sSouthern California
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''Talk Talk'' (2006)2000sCalifornia and New York state
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''A Friend of the Earth'' (2000)late 1980s; 2025-2026California, Oregon
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External links



T. C. Boyle's author-run website: Includes reviews, excerpts, current events and contact info

The T. Coraghessan Boyle Research Center (in English, French, German, and Dutch).

German Website about T.C. Boyle

Interview with Boyle and critical essays about his work.

Audio interviews with T. Coraghessan Boyle, RealAudio

Interview with IdentityTheory.com

Interview with 3:AM Magazine

Interview with failbetter



The Bat Segundo Show #10 (podcast interview)

The Bat Segundo Show #70 (2006 podcast interview)

2007 Evil Companions award (photo by Don Zirulnik)

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