T. C. Boyle
USC College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
In his wildly successful books and short stories, Thomas Coraghessan Boyle has a restless imagination, but in his personal life, he is unfailingly loyal. He’s known his best friend since he was 3½, has remained with the same agent and publisher for decades and “is the only author with the same wife,” he jokes. USC is another long relationship that is important to him. Boyle, who holds a Ph.D. in 19th-century British literature and an MFA from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, has been teaching at USC since 1978. Although he resides near Santa Barbara, each year, Boyle teaches two advanced fiction classes for undergraduates and one graduate class. In addition, all three of his children are Trojans. The prolific author chatted with writer Allison Engel about teaching, television, commuting and a well-known affinity for brightly colored shoes.
Why do you teach?
Because it is my love and my privilege. I have been teaching since I was 21, and I hope to continue as long as I can. Throughout my life I have had mentors who helped me find my way – in junior high, high school, undergrad and grad school – people who inspired and guided me. I hope to perform the same function for my students – and to help keep alive the love for literature that burns in me.
What can universities do to develop the creative writing obsessive-compulsive disorder in students?
My, my. You've taken one of my jokes and thrown it back at me. Yes, a fanatical devotion to the arts – an obsessive-compulsive disorder, if you will – is necessary to the production of great work and to the continued stimulation necessary to a long and evolving career. What can we do? Show the students the very best examples of writing and coach them on their way.
How have the students changed over the years you’ve been at USC?
In my field – the arts – the students are very similar now to what they were then. There is a great pool of talent in writing, and I’m happy to be involved in it. If there is a difference, it’s in the fact that the students are perhaps more attuned to the ways of a creative writing workshop today for the simple reason that more workshops have been available to them over the course of their education.
To the consternation of many other fiction writers, you are incredibly prolific. You also don’t watch television. Are the two connected? Is there anything on television you are curious to see?
I am a bit of a crank, I admit. Until I went off to college at 17, I was part of a household in which the TV was on all the time. In college, I discovered that there was more to life than TV. And so I refuse to watch any prime-time programming. Yes, yes, I know I’ve missed great things like The Simpsons, but let me be a crank. I do watch PBS once in a while, I love the old movie channel, and I do watch the Dodgers and Angels usually sans sound, with music and a book
How do you make your commute from Santa Barbara to USC tolerable?
Books on Tape. I am a devotee. So much so that I spent some very pleasant hours recently in their Woodland Hills Studios, doing the unabridged narration of both Tooth and Claw, [his 2005 collection of stories] and the new [2006] novel, Talk Talk.
Why red shoes?
I got my first pair of these [red Converse high tops] in 1995, but I’ve always worn red shoes. I think shoes should be red. I also think cars should be red. My colors are black, white and red.
- T. C. Boyle's faculty bio
- T. C. Boyle's Web site
- To read a longer version of this interview, click here