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Tobias Wolff

Writer

Tobias Wolff is best known as the author of This Boy's Life (1989), a funny-sad memoir of growing up with an itinerant mother and abusive step-father. Born in Alabama, Wolff grew up mostly in the Skagit River Valley of Washington State. His four years in the Army (1964-68) included a tour of duty in Vietnam. After graduating from Oxford, Wolff was awarded a writing fellowship at Stanford University in 1975. His first collections of short stories, In the Garden of North American Martyrs (1981) and Back in the World (1985), were both well received, but it was This Boy's Life that made Wolff famous. (The book was made into a 1993 movie with Robert DeNiro and young Leonardo DiCaprio.) He has since published In Pharaoh's Army: Memories of the Lost War (1994), a memoir of his experiences in Vietnam, The Night in Question (1996), another collection of short stories, and the novels The Barracks Thief (which won the 1985 PEN/Faulkner Award) and Old School (2003). Wolff has also published dozens of magazine pieces and edited a book of stories by Anton Chekhov.

Four Good Links

Tobias Wolff Audio Interview

Two audio files, from 1985 and 1989

Tobias Wolff Interview

Brief but informative 2008 chat with the Washington Post

The Salon Interview

Detailed discussion of his attitudes toward writing

Talking with Tobias Wolff

He answers questions about writing

Vital Stats

Birth

19 June 1945
(age 63)

Birthplace

Birmingham, Alabama

Death

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Best Known As

Author of the memoir This Boy's Life