Tom Barbash
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tom Barbash is an American writer of fiction and nonfiction, educator and critic. He is the author of the novel The Last Good Chance and the bestselling nonfiction work On Top of the World: Cantor Fitzgerald, Howard Lutnick & 9/11: A Story of Loss & Renewal. His fiction has been published in Tin House, Story magazine, The Virginia Quarterly Review and The Indiana Review. His criticism has appeared in the New York Times and the San Francisco Chronicle.
He currently teaches at Stanford University, where he was a Stegner Fellow, and a Jones Lecturer at California College of the Arts, and at the Rainier Writing Workshop, a low-residency MFA program at Pacific Lutheran University. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.
[edit] Honors
- Stegner Fellowship, Stanford University
- California Book Award for First Fiction (2002)
- James Michener Award (2002)
- Nelson Algren Award for Short Fiction
- Recipient, National Endowment of the Arts grant in fiction.
[edit] Personal Life
- Barbash was formerly a reporter for the Syracuse Post Standard, an experience that helped to shape his novel The Last Good Chance, which is set in upstate New York.
- He is a member of the San Francisco Writers' Grotto, a workspace co-operative that also includes Po Bronson, Caroline Paul, Peter Orner, ZZ Packer, Jason Roberts and B. Ruby Rich, among others.
[edit] External links
- Interview with Paula Zahn on CNN.
- Barbash's short story The Break, published in Tin House
- New York Times review of The Last Good Chance
Categories: Year of birth missing (living people) | Living people | American biographers | American novelists | American short story writers | California writers | People from San Francisco, California | Stanford University faculty | United States non-fiction writer stubs | American short story writer stubs

