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George Tabb grew up as one of the few Jews in Greenwich, CT, which became the subject of this first memoir, Playing Right Field: A Jew Grows in Greenwich. He started one of Floridašs first hardcore bands, Roach Motel, and wrote for NY Press for more than a decade. He now lives with his wife in Phoenix, AZ, where he writes for the Phoenix New Times. His latest book is Surfing Armageddon.
 
  Cecilia Tan is the publisher and editor of Circlet Press, a small publishing house in Boston specializing in erotic fantasy and science fiction. She has published stories, essays and articles in dozens of magazines and anthologies including Best America Erotica, Best Lesbian Erotica, Playboy Online, The Mammoth Book of New Erotica, On A Bed of Rice, To Be Continued, Queer View Mirror, Dark Angels, Penthouse, Ms. and Publishers Weekly. As often in a Yankees cap as she is in leather, Tan has covered the team for the website Yankees Xtreme. She is also an officer of the New England chapter of the National Leather Association.
 
  Jennifer Tanaka lives in New York. She has covered the Internet and computer technology for Newsweek magazine since 1995, when Mosaic was just a cool piece of shareware.
 
Born in 1972, photographer Pascal Tarraire lives and works in southern France. He attended the French National Photographic School. Selections from his new book can be viewed at https://corpspartages.free.fr.
 
  Tristan Taormino is the author of The Ultimate Guide to Anal Sex for Women and the producer, director and star of the video based on her book. She is editor of On Our Backs, a columnist for The Village Voice and sex advice columnist for Taboo magazine. She recently finished a new sex guide which will be published in September 2001 and her new sex talk show, "Sexology," airs on the Burly Bear Network, a college cable network, www.burlybear.com.
 
Tom Tavee's photographs have appeared in GQ, Rolling Stone, Discover, Travel & Leisure and other magazines. He is currently making a documentary and he likes to kickbox.
 
T.K. Tawni was born in Florida, received an M.F.A. in Fiction from the University of Iowa, and is currently at work on a trio of novellas in a very old house in a very small town.
 
Bruce Taylor's poems have appeared in The Chicago Review, The Formalist, Gulf Coast, The Literary Review, The Nation, The New York Quarterly and Poetry. The most recent of his four books of poetry is This Day, and he is the recipient of awards and fellowships from the Wisconsin Arts Board, NEA and the Bush Arts Foundation. Online, his poems have appeared at Cross Connect, Savoy, Sparks, Poetry Now and Tintern Abby.
 
Michelle Tea co-founded the all-girl spoken-word roadshow known as Sister Spit, which has performed to sold-out houses across America since they first hit the road in 1997. She has written two novels, The Passionate Mistakes and Intricate Corruption of One Girl in America and Valencia. Tea was the 1996 recipient of the Cable Car Award for Best Critic, based on writing which appeared in the San Francisco Bay Times. She also occasionally writes for the San Francisco Bay Guardian, On Our Backs and Out magazine. She was one of seven women selected to recieve a 1999 Rona Jaffe Award, presented to promising female writers at the beginnings of their careers.
 
David Teague studied literature at Hendrix College in Arkansas and at the University of Virginia. His short stories have won the Redneck Review of Literature Western Fiction Prize and the Delaware Division of the Arts Fellowship in Fiction. He is currently completing a novel, William Norton's Death, and a screenplay, Singletree.
 
Masami Teraoka was born in 1936 in Onomichi, a small town between Hiroshima and Osaka on the Sea of Japan. He moved to Los Angeles in 1961 to study art. As an art student, he was inspired by both American pop art and Japanese ukiyo-e prints. He lives in Hawaii.
 
Terminator (See J. T. Leroy.)
 
William Tester is a native of Charleston and North Florida, and is the author of the novel-length prose poem Darling and a book of short stories, Head. He has degrees from Syracuse and Columbia Universities, and is the recipient of the NEA Fellowship for Fiction, the Hob Broun Prize, the PEN Syndicated Fiction Award and grants from the Virginia Commission for Arts and the Constance Saltonstall Foundation. He lives in Richmond and teaches creative writing at Virginia Commonwealth University.
 
Julie Tetel is an Associate Professor of English at Duke University and author of fifteen historical romances. She also runs her own publishing company, Madeira Books (madeirabooks.com), where you'll find lots of information about her.
 
Catherine Texier was born and raised in France and now lives in New York City. She wrote her first novel, Chloé l'Atlantique, in French, and is the author of two novels in English, Love Me Tender and Panic Blood. Her work has been translated into nine languages. She was co-editor, with Joel Rose, of Between C and D. She is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Award and a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship. Her newest book is entitled Breakup.
 
Adam Thirlwell was born in 1978, and grew up in North London. He was placed on Granta's 2003 list of Best Young British Writers under forty. He is assistant editor of the literary magazine Areté, and a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford. POLITICS is his first novel.
 
  Clive Thompson lives in Brooklyn, where he complains about the heat. He is the technology columnist for Newsday, and writes for magazines including Shift, Wired, Entertainment Weekly and The Baffler. Email him shots of yourself topless at [email protected].
 
  Helen Thorpe is a freelance writer based in Austin, Texas. Her work has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, George and Slate, among other publications.
 
Noy Thrupkaew writes frequently on international affairs and culture as a freelance journalist and senior correspondent for The American Prospect. A former Pew fellow in International Journalism, she has lived in Thailand, reported from Cuba, Iran, Cambodia, and Morocco, and worked as a discussion panelist for Japan's largest English-language radio station. She has written for The Guardian (U.K.), Ms., The Nation, Kyoto Journal, and was an Online Journalism Award finalist for cultural commentary in 2003.
 
  Leonore Tiefer is a clinical psychologist in New York City and author of Sex Is Not a Natural Act, and Other Essays (1995). Her new anti-medicalization campaign includes the document, "A New View of Women's Sexual Problems," which is available on various websites.
 
  Wolfgang Tillmans was born in Germany and studied at Bournemouth & Poole College of Art & Design in England. His photography first appeared in i-D and has since appeared in galleries, publications and museums throughout the world. He is co-publisher of the magazine Spex.
 
Sallie Tisdale is the author of five nonfiction books, including Stepping Westward and Talk Dirty to Me: An Intimate Philosophy of Sex. She is a contributing editor at Harper's and Tricycle, and has just begun writing a column for Salon. Her work has appeared in The New Republic, The New Yorker, Spin, Traveler and Antioch Review. She is currently at work on a new book, entitled Pigs in Blankets. Tisdale lives in the Northwest.
 
Cammie Toloui's photographs appeared in the "Bad Girls" show at The New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York City, P.S. 122 in New York City and The Camerawork Gallery in San Francisco and can be viewed on her website. She has been published in Elle, See, Surface, Vi Menn (Norway) and Visual Communications Quarterly. Cammie is the recipient of The New York Times Award for Excellence in Photojournalism and the Greg Robinson Memorial Photojournalism Scholarship. She holds a degree in photojournalism from San Francisco State University.
 
Touré is a contributing editor at Rolling Stone. He has studied at Columbia University's Graduate School of Creative Writing and written for The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, Playboy, Callaloo and The Village Voice. He has an essay forthcoming in the Best American Essays of 1999. He lives in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, and plays guerilla tennis.
 
Sarah Towers lives in Brooklyn. Her short stories have been published in Elle and Seventeen, and her essays, interviews and reviews have appeared in various magazines, including Mirabella, Bookforum and Time Out. A story of hers is forthcoming in Tin House.
 
Peter Trachtenberg is a writer and storyteller whose work has appeared in Harper's, Bomb, Chicago and Salon. His most recent book is 7 Tattoos: A Memoir in the Flesh.
 
The photographs of Arthur Tress are included in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Whitney Museum of American Art, The International Center of Photography, Centre Georges Pompidou and others. He has published eleven books of photography, including the forthcoming Male of the Species.
 
When he's not venting his bile-filled spleen in columns, reviews and articles for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Werner Trieschmann is venting his bile-filled spleen in plays for the stage. These plays, including Dog Star, Subculture and Lawn Dart, have been produced by theaters in Los Angeles, New York and Boston. Trieschmann's latest play is You Have to Serve Somebody.
 
Ken Tucker is the film critic for New York Magazine. He was Entertainment Weekly's chief TV critic and Critic-At-Large since EW's founding, in 1989. Visit his website: https://www.kentucker.net/
 
Nola Tully spent several years as a photojournalist based in New York. Her photos are published in national and international news magazines, among them New York, Life, Paris Match and Stern and in a book on the Gulf War published by Abrams. She has written photography and art reviews for DoubleTake, Afterimage and other venues, and her fiction has appeared in Ploughshares.
 
Spencer Tunick is best known as the creator of "Naked States," a "photographic record of nude America." His photographs have been published in The New York Times Magazine, Art in America, Flash Art and other publications, and he has exhibited around the world. Tunick's next project is "Nude Adrift."
 
Daniel Drew Turner is a freelance writer whose work has appeared in FEED, The Boston Book Review, Lingua Franca and Mountain Biker among other places. His occasional fiction has surfaced in The Santa Barbara Review and Art/Life.
 
Grady T. Turner is an independent curator and critic, and Director of Exhibitions at The New York Historical Society.
 
Justin Tussing is a graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop. His first novel, The Best People in the World, will be published by HarperCollins in February. An excerpt from that book appeared in the New Yorker's 2005 Debut Fiction Issue.
 
Michael Tyrell's poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Harvard Review, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, Western Humanities Review and other magazines, and his manuscript of poems was a finalist for the Yale Series of Younger Poets. He has also written for Boston Review, The New Yorker and US Weekly. He works at the Academy of American Poets and lives in Woodside, New York.


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