Tom Wolfe

Author details

Aliases:
Thomas K. Wolfe, توم وولف, トム ウルフ, and 24 others Томас Кеннерли Вулф, Ṭom Ṿolf, Wolfe, Toms Vulfs, 톰 울프, トム・ウルフ, Том Вульф, Thomas Kennerly Jr Wolfe, Thomas Kennerly, تام وولف, טום וולף, Tomas Kennerli Vulf, Tom Wolfe, Tom Kennerly Wolfe, Tom Vwlf, Вулф, توم ۆۋلف, 汤姆·沃尔夫, Thomas Kennerly Wolfe, 톰울프, Tomu Urufu, Том Вулф, ტომ ვულფი, Tom Vulf
Born:
July 15, 1931
Died:
July 15, 2018

External links

Tom Wolfe was born and raised in Richmond, Virginia. He was educated at Washington and Lee (B.A., 1951) and Yale (Ph.D., American Studies, 1957) universities. In December 1956, he took a job as a reporter on the Springfield (Massachusetts) Union. This was the beginning of a ten-year newspaper career, most of it spent as a general assignment reporter. For six months in 1960 he served as The Washington Post's Latin American correspondent and won the Washington Newspaper Guild's foreign news prize for his coverage of Cuba.

In 1962 he became a reporter for the New York Herald-Tribune and, in addition, one of the two staff writers (Jimmy Breslin was the other) of New York magazine, which began as the Herald-Tribune's Sunday supplement. While still a daily reporter for the Herald-Tribune, he completed his first book, a collection of articles about the flamboyant Sixties written for New York and Esquire and published in 1965 by Farrar, Straus, and Giroux as The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby. The book became a bestseller and established Wolfe as a leading figure in the literary experiments in nonfiction that became known as New Journalism.

In 1968 he published two bestsellers on the same day: The Pump …

Books by Tom Wolfe