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Tom Lutz
Tom Lutz
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Tom Lutz (born March 21, 1953)[1][2] is an American writer, literary critic and the founder of the Los Angeles Review of Books.[3]

Key Information

Early life

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Lutz grew up in Cedar Grove, New Jersey. He graduated from Greenwich (CT) High School. After working for years as a cook, carpenter, and musician in New York, Florida, and Iowa, he got a job cooking breakfast and lunch at a small college where the financial aid officer offered to get him a Pell Grant so he could enroll at the college for free. He continued in the job and took afternoon and evening classes at the University of Dubuque before transferring and receiving his B.A. degree in English and journalism from University of Massachusetts, and a master's degree and Ph.D. in Modern Thought and Literature from Stanford University.[2]

Career

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Lutz taught American literature, cultural studies, literary theory, and creative writing at the California Institute of the Arts, University of Iowa,[4] Stanford University, and the University of Copenhagen.[2] He was Distinguished Professor and Chair of the Department of Creative Writing at University of California, Riverside and retired in 2024. He is now Distinguished professor Emeritus.[5][6]

He has published more than 100 articles in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The New Republic, Chicago Tribune, Die Zeit, ZYZZYVA, Exquisite Corpse, Salon.com, Black Clock and dozens of other magazines, newspapers, book collections, and literary and academic journals.[7]

His books include Portraits (Rare Bird Lit, 2022), The Kindness of Strangers (University of Iowa Press, 2021),[8] Aimlessness (Columbia University Press, 2021),[9] Born Slippy: A Novel (Repeater Books, 2020),[10] And the Monkey Learned Nothing: Dispatches from a Life of Travel (University of Iowa Press, 2017),[11] Drinking Mare's Milk on the Roof of the World: Wandering the Globe from Azerbaijan to Zanzibar (O|R Books, 2016),[12] Doing Nothing: A History of Loafers, Loungers, Slackers, and Bums in America (Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2007; American Book Award), Cosmopolitan Vistas: American Regionalism and Literary Value (Cornell University Press, 2004; Choice Outstanding Academic Title), Crying: The Natural & Cultural History of Tears (WW Norton, 1999; New York Times Notable Book), and American Nervousness, 1903: An Anecdotal History (Cornell University Press, 1991; New York Times Notable Book). They have been translated into 13 languages.[7]

He is the founding editor and publisher of Los Angeles Review of Books.[13] Los Angeles Review of Books launched in April 2011. He also founded The LARB Radio Hour[14] and The LARB Quarterly Journal.[15]

He was the founding producer and host of The LARB Radio Hour.[16]

In 2016, he launched the LARB Publishing Workshop, which seeks "to revolutionize the publishing industry from the ground up by increasing access, facilitating change, and inspiring invention through the recruitment, training, and mentorship of early-career talent from diverse backgrounds." Over 500 people have been through the workshop, and over 100 publishing professionals have helped teach the course. [17]

In 2017, he launched LARB Books, which has published two dozen classic and new books.[18]

He lives in Los Angeles, California,[19] and St. Chamassy, France, in the Dordogne, with his wife, Laurie Winer. They now run the St. Chamassy Writers' Residency.[20] Lutz has two new books appearing in 2025, Still Slippy: A Novel (Red Hen Press) and 1925: A Literary Encyclopedia (Rare Bird Lit).

Awards

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Works

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Books:

Other:

  • "Gravy Donuts", in Juan Felipe Herrera, ed. Francisco Lomeli, forthcoming Arizona 2023.
  • "Gravy Donuts", Iowa Review, forthcoming 2023.
  • "Coming to LA: Images of the Migrant City", Pratik: A Magazine of Contemporary Writing, ed. Yuyutsu Sharma, April 2021
  • "Chinggis Kahn, the Nomad Steppe, and the Mongolian Sublime", Red Dirt Forum, April 2020
  • "Names, Thrills, and Sociopaths: Tom Lutz on Writing Born Slippy", with Tobias Carroll, in Vol. 1 Brooklyn, April 2020
  • "The Achievement of Walter Mosley, LARB Radio Hour, March 2020
  • "Five Things about Failure", DIYMFA, February 2020
  • "Noir: A Conversation", with Steph Cha, LitHub, January 14, 2020
  • "The Ship of State", a conversation with Dave Eggers, Los Angeles Review of Books, December 2019
  • "The Movie-Made Self", an introduction to Merton of the Movies, by Harry Leon Wilson, LARB Classics, November 2019
  • "Gun Island: An Interview with Amitav Ghosh", LARB Radio Hour, October 2019
  • "In the Shadow of the Archive", in The Critic as Amateur, ed. Saikat Majumdar and Aarthi Vadde, Bloomsbury, September 2019
  • "Where the Amateur Reader Ends, and the Professional Critic Begins", LitHub, August 2019
  • “This Storm: Interview with James Ellroy", LARB Radio Hour, July 2019
  • "The Parade: A Conversation with Dave Eggers", LARB Radio Hour, June 2019
  • "Talent Show: A Conversation with Juliet Lapidos", LARB Radio Hour, Los Angeles, April 26, 2019
  • "Making the World Safe for Nerds", Michael Silverblatt, a chapbook, A Public Space Books, November 2018
  • "A Conversation with Laurie Winer and Seth Greenland, LARB Radio Hour, October 2018
  • “A Conversation with Eric Vuillard and Laurie Winer", Chevalier's Books, LARB Radio Hour, September 2018
  • "The Missing Narrator: A Conversation with Rachel Cusk", LARB Radio Hour, Los Angeles CA, May 2018.
  • "Gun Love: A Conversation with Jill Clement", LARB Radio Hour, Los Angeles CA, March 2018
  • "A Life in Letters: An Evening with Maxine Hong Kingston", LARB Radio Hour, Los Angeles CA, February 2018
  • Interview with Antonio Damasio and Eric Newman, LARB Radio Hour, February 2018.
  • "LA Femme en Noir", LALA, Fall 2017
  • "Publishing in Los Angeles", LALA, Summer 2017
  • "Behagen und Unbehagen aud der Matratze", Matratze/Matrize: Mobelierung von Subjekt und Gesellschaft, ed. Irene Nierhaus and Kathrin Heinz, Transcript, 2016.
  • "The Commons as Network", ASAP/Journal, Vol. 1: p. 49–50, 2016.
  • "A Conversation with Nicholson Baker", LARB Radio Hour, Los Angeles CA. September 2016.
  • Interview, Elif Batuman, Los Angeles/New York, LARB Radio Hour, June 2016
  • "Finding This Lost City in Honduras Was the Easy Part", The New York Times, March 20, 2015
  • "Plov Day in Tashkent", Litscapes, ed. Caitlin M. Alvarez and Kass Fleisher, Steerage Press, 2015
  • "Interview with Iconic Poet Nikki Giovanni", Los Angeles Review of Books, May 18, 2015
  • "Tavis Smiley’s New Memoir of Maya Angelou", Los Angeles Review of Books, May 1, 2015
  • "There’s No Writer’s Block in the Newsroom", Los Angeles Review of Books, April 5, 2015
  • "John Rechy: An Interview" (with John-Michael Andriote), Los Angeles Review of Books, January 17, 2015
  • "An Interview with No Pictures: BJ Novak", Los Angeles Review of Books, Dec 9, 2014
  • "Notes form the Albanian Diaspora", Iowa Review, Fall 2014
  • "Coda: Nostalgia", Iowa Journal of Cultural Studies, 2009
  • "Think you know how to read, do you?". Salon. March 8, 2007.
  • "The Summer Next Time". The New York Times. September 4, 2006.

Reviews

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Tom Lutz is an American writer, literary critic, professor, and editor best known for founding the Los Angeles Review of Books and authoring acclaimed works of cultural history, travel writing, and fiction. He is Distinguished Professor of the Graduate Division in the Department of Creative Writing at the University of California, Riverside, where he has shaped creative writing programs and mentored emerging authors. Lutz founded the Los Angeles Review of Books, serving as its founding editor in chief and publisher. His editorial work includes founding related initiatives such as LARB Books, the LARB Quarterly Journal, and the LARB Radio Hour, and he has edited approximately fifty books while contributing criticism and essays to outlets such as the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, New Republic, and LitHub. Among his notable nonfiction books are American Nervousness, 1903, a New York Times Notable Book; Crying: The Natural and Cultural History of Tears, also a New York Times Notable Book; Doing Nothing: A History of Loafers, Loungers, Slackers, and Bums, which received an American Book Award; and travel memoirs including The Kindness of Strangers, Drinking Mare's Milk on the Roof of the World, and And the Monkey Learned Nothing. More recent works include Aimlessness (2021), Portraits (2022), and the forthcoming 1925: A Literary Encyclopedia. He has also published the novel Born Slippy and Chagos Archipelago. His writing has been translated into twelve languages, with several titles appearing on bestseller lists of the New York Times and Los Angeles Times. Lutz's career includes prior teaching positions at Stanford University, the University of Iowa, CalArts, and the University of Copenhagen, along with work in film and television.

Early Life

Birth and Family

Tom Lutz was born on March 21, 1953, and grew up in Cedar Grove, New Jersey. No additional details about his parents or siblings are widely documented in available sources.

Early Life and Education

Lutz graduated from Greenwich High School in Connecticut. After high school, he worked for several years as a cook, carpenter, and musician in New York City, Florida, and Iowa. He later worked in the kitchen at a small college, where a financial aid officer assisted him in obtaining a Pell Grant to attend tuition-free. While continuing kitchen work, he took classes at the University of Dubuque. He transferred to the University of Massachusetts, earning a B.A. in English and journalism. Lutz then received an M.A. and Ph.D. in Modern Thought and Literature from Stanford University. No details about early interests in writing or literature leading to his career are widely documented beyond his later academic path.

Career

Tom Lutz has built his career primarily in academia, literary criticism, cultural history, and independent publishing. He earned a PhD in Modern Thought and Literature from Stanford University in 1989. He has taught American literature, cultural studies, literary theory, and creative writing at the California Institute of the Arts, the University of Iowa, Stanford University, the University of Copenhagen, and the University of California, Riverside. At UC Riverside, he served as Distinguished Professor and Chair of the Department of Creative Writing until his retirement in 2024; he is now Distinguished Professor Emeritus. Before entering academia, Lutz worked as a cook, carpenter, and musician in New York, Florida, and Iowa. He is the founding editor in chief and publisher of the Los Angeles Review of Books (launched in 2011), where he has overseen initiatives including LARB Books (launched 2017), the LARB Quarterly Journal, the LARB Radio Hour (which he founded and hosted), and the LARB Publishing Workshop (launched 2016 to train diverse early-career publishing professionals). He has edited approximately fifty books and contributed criticism and essays to outlets including the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, New Republic, and LitHub. Lutz has written for film and television, including as writer, creator, and executive producer of The Key, a limited series historical drama currently in development with Pale Blue Dot Productions and Blue Sky Productions (pilot script and six-season bible completed).

Personal Life

Family and Private Life

Tom Lutz keeps his family and private life largely out of the public eye, with few details appearing in reliable sources. Information about his spouse, children, or non-professional activities is not widely documented or verified in credible publications. He is known among colleagues as a dedicated professional whose personal life remains private. Tom Lutz is alive as of 2025. He was born on March 21, 1953, and continues to be active as a writer, editor, and professor. Recent work includes an article published in April 2025. The previous content in this section refers to other individuals named Tom Lutz and has been removed as inaccurate for this article's subject.

Legacy

Tom Lutz has left a significant mark on contemporary literature, cultural criticism, and publishing through his authorship, editorial leadership, and academic career.

Recognition and Awards

His nonfiction works have received critical acclaim, including American Nervousness, 1903 and Crying: The Natural and Cultural History of Tears, both designated as New York Times Notable Books, and Doing Nothing: A History of Loafers, Loungers, Slackers, and Bums, which was awarded an American Book Award. Several of his books, including travel memoirs such as The Kindness of Strangers and Drinking Mare's Milk on the Roof of the World, have appeared on bestseller lists of the New York Times and Los Angeles Times, and his writing has been translated into twelve languages.

Editorial and Publishing Impact

Lutz founded the Los Angeles Review of Books (LARB) and served as its editor in chief and publisher, establishing it as a prominent platform for long-form literary journalism, essays, and reviews. Under his leadership, LARB expanded to include LARB Books, the LARB Quarterly Journal, and the LARB Radio Hour. He has also edited approximately fifty books and contributed criticism to major outlets including the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, New Republic, and LitHub.

Academic Influence

As Distinguished Professor of Creative Writing at the University of California, Riverside, Lutz has shaped creative writing programs and mentored emerging authors. His prior teaching roles at Stanford University, the University of Iowa, CalArts, and the University of Copenhagen further reflect his contributions to literary education. Lutz's ongoing work, including the novel Born Slippy and the forthcoming Archipelago, continues to bridge creative writing, cultural history, and public intellectual discourse.
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