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.[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.

Tony Tulathimutte
Tulathimutte at the 2016 Texas Book Festival
Born (1983-09-01) 1 September 1983
Springfield, Massachusetts
Website
tonytula.com

Raised in South Hadley, Massachusetts, he currently attends the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and formerly worked as a writer and researcher on user experience topics.[3]

Works

Fiction
Nonfiction

Awards

gollark: Oh cool, a good keycard door lock program.
gollark: Obviously all this needs power, so there's a 16kRF/t TBU oxide reactor (machine-designed) on the left powering it. Thorium is supplied by the lens of the miner setup and it somehow runs net-positive.
gollark: The roof has an AE2 system glued to it which does the main crafting.
gollark: Gold is supplied by a lens of the miner setup with some processing hooked to it. That dumps into the 28 or so storage caches.
gollark: Since I don't want to mine for those constantly, the machinery near the back grows redstone (and slime, string, cacti) and also produces several million wooden planks a day as byproduct. I don't know *what* to do with those.

References

  1. The O. Henry Prize Stories 2008
  2. Tulathimutte, Tony (2016-02-09). Private Citizens: A Novel. William Morrow Paperbacks. ISBN 9780062399106.
  3. "Tony Tulathimutte Archive". User Experience Magazine. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
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