Authors You Need To Read

Where to Start With: T.C. Boyle

I’m such a T.C. Boyle fan I’ve interviewed him three times for three different newspapers—several of which no longer exist. It’s not surprising that the energetic Boyle has outlasted many other writers, publications, and institutions. He’s the author of 25 books, from 1982 debut Water Music to this year’s The Harder They Come, and shows no signs of slowing his high-quality literary output any time soon. Why do I keep coming back to Boyle? For many reasons—his storytelling chops, making you feel from the first word that you’re in the hands of a master; his outsized characters; his interest in recurring themes, such as humanity’s animal nature, that nevertheless always feel fresh; and the vigor of his prose. If you’ve never picked up a Boyle book or want to explore his catalogue further, here’s where to start.

The Tortilla Curtain

The Tortilla Curtain

Paperback $17.00

The Tortilla Curtain

By T. C. Boyle

Paperback $17.00

The Tortilla Curtain (1995)
According to Boyle, this provocative novel is his book most often selected for citywide and university reads. Perhaps that’s because its themes remain as relevant today as they were 20 years ago: the fate of Mexican migrants and what happens when they come into conflict with well-heeled Americans, the degradation of the environment, and the tendency for drought-stricken California to flare up in wildfires. Or maybe the book is selected for community read-ins because it’s a humdinger of a story.

The Tortilla Curtain (1995)
According to Boyle, this provocative novel is his book most often selected for citywide and university reads. Perhaps that’s because its themes remain as relevant today as they were 20 years ago: the fate of Mexican migrants and what happens when they come into conflict with well-heeled Americans, the degradation of the environment, and the tendency for drought-stricken California to flare up in wildfires. Or maybe the book is selected for community read-ins because it’s a humdinger of a story.

T.C. Boyle Stories

T.C. Boyle Stories

Paperback $22.00

T.C. Boyle Stories

By T. C. Boyle

Paperback $22.00

T.C. Boyle Stories (1998)
T.C. Boyle’s early novels earned plenty of accolades, including a Pen/Faulkner Award for 1987’s World’s End, but I tend to prefer his more recent novels, since Boyle has since refined his storytelling skills to virtuoso levels. On the other hand, I love his raw, surprising early short stories, collected in this 1998 volume, especially my all-time favorite, “Stones in My Passway, Hellhound on My Trail,” a harrowing, quick-as-a-flash tale about blues musician Robert Johnson.

T.C. Boyle Stories (1998)
T.C. Boyle’s early novels earned plenty of accolades, including a Pen/Faulkner Award for 1987’s World’s End, but I tend to prefer his more recent novels, since Boyle has since refined his storytelling skills to virtuoso levels. On the other hand, I love his raw, surprising early short stories, collected in this 1998 volume, especially my all-time favorite, “Stones in My Passway, Hellhound on My Trail,” a harrowing, quick-as-a-flash tale about blues musician Robert Johnson.

The Inner Circle

The Inner Circle

Paperback $17.00

The Inner Circle

By T. C. Boyle

Paperback $17.00

The Inner Circle (2004)
When I interviewed Boyle in 2007, he was at work on The Women, a novel inspired by the life of Frank Lloyd Wright, and a book he described as being part of his “great egomaniacs of the 20th century” series, which also includes 1993’s The Road to Wellville, about John Harvey Kellogg. If forced to choose just one of Boyle’s egomaniac books, I’d pick The Inner Circle, because Boyle and sex researcher Alfred Kinsey are a match made in literary heaven. Told from the perspective of Kinsey’s fictional assistant John Milk, this novel is full of humor, conflict, and sex, of course.

The Inner Circle (2004)
When I interviewed Boyle in 2007, he was at work on The Women, a novel inspired by the life of Frank Lloyd Wright, and a book he described as being part of his “great egomaniacs of the 20th century” series, which also includes 1993’s The Road to Wellville, about John Harvey Kellogg. If forced to choose just one of Boyle’s egomaniac books, I’d pick The Inner Circle, because Boyle and sex researcher Alfred Kinsey are a match made in literary heaven. Told from the perspective of Kinsey’s fictional assistant John Milk, this novel is full of humor, conflict, and sex, of course.

Drop City

Drop City

Paperback $18.00

Drop City

By T. C. Boyle

Paperback $18.00

Drop City (2003)
This novel, a finalist for the National Book Award, concerns a group of hippies living in the Drop City commune in Sonoma, California, in 1970. Government officials seek to oust them because “nobody wanted a free-form community in their midst, because free-form meant anarchy, it meant a cordillera of trash a mile high and human shit in the woods.” They relocate to Boynton, Alaska, to the consternation of the native population, and living off the land becomes a lot more intense for the acid-laced hippies.

Drop City (2003)
This novel, a finalist for the National Book Award, concerns a group of hippies living in the Drop City commune in Sonoma, California, in 1970. Government officials seek to oust them because “nobody wanted a free-form community in their midst, because free-form meant anarchy, it meant a cordillera of trash a mile high and human shit in the woods.” They relocate to Boynton, Alaska, to the consternation of the native population, and living off the land becomes a lot more intense for the acid-laced hippies.

The Harder They Come

The Harder They Come

Hardcover $27.99

The Harder They Come

By T. C. Boyle

Hardcover $27.99

The Harder They Come (2015)
Boyle doesn’t make despicable characters likeable, but he always manages to render them at least compelling and human, and that gift has perhaps never been stronger than in his most recent novel. The book, inspired by recent events, is told from three perspectives—that of a 70-year-old Vietnam veteran who kills a would-be robber in Costa Rica with his bare hands; that man’s mentally disturbed son Adam, who heads into the California wilderness and lives there as an outlaw, breaking into cabins and growing poppies for opium; and Adam’s lover, an anti-government woman whose relationship with Adam culminates in a crime spree. It’s volatile material, and in Boyle’s sure hands, it’s riveting.

The Harder They Come (2015)
Boyle doesn’t make despicable characters likeable, but he always manages to render them at least compelling and human, and that gift has perhaps never been stronger than in his most recent novel. The book, inspired by recent events, is told from three perspectives—that of a 70-year-old Vietnam veteran who kills a would-be robber in Costa Rica with his bare hands; that man’s mentally disturbed son Adam, who heads into the California wilderness and lives there as an outlaw, breaking into cabins and growing poppies for opium; and Adam’s lover, an anti-government woman whose relationship with Adam culminates in a crime spree. It’s volatile material, and in Boyle’s sure hands, it’s riveting.