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About Author T.J. Stiles
T.J. Stiles and his son Dillon, December 2009
More About the Author:
A Brief Autobiography by T.J. Stiles I was born and raised in Minnesota, just outside of the town of Foley (pop. 1,200), where my father was one of two doctors and was the Benton County coroner. It was (and is) a farming community, a landscape of dairy and hog farms.
Benton County, Minnesota, birthplace of T.J. Stiles
My father attended Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, in the 1950s, and liked to claim a relation to one of the James-Younger gang, William Stiles, who was killed on the streets of Northfield in 1876. (Despite a remarkable resemblance between my father and the hapless outlaw, there is almost certainly no relation.) I attended Carleton as well decades later, but had little idea that I would one day write a biography of Jesse James.
Northfield, Minnesota: The building housing the First National Bank, still standing in Northfield today.
The Path Toward Jesse James
I graduated from Carleton with distinction in history, and accepted a fellowship to attend the graduate school of Columbia University in New York, where I studied European history. After I completed coursework, wrote a master's thesis, passed oral examinations, and received two graduate degrees (M.A. and M.Phil., Columbia's all-but-dissertation degree), I decided against an academic career. I began to work for Oxford University Press, where I worked with many leading American historians published by the press. I also began an independent writing career. I authored a five-volume series of historical anthologies. I also wrote articles for the Smithsonian, and opinion pieces that were published by the Denver Post and the Los Angeles Times. My independent studies turned my attention to nineteenth-century America, particularly the era of the Civil War. Here, I believe, we can see the makings of the modern United States. My desire to write a large-scale, original narrative about the period led me to the subject of Jesse James, who had been underestimated as a significant, purposeful, and political figure. More than that, James remains an American icon—a challenging subject for a writer—and had never received the nonfiction treatment he deserved. The resulting biography, Jesse James: Last Rebel of the Civil War, was published in 2002 by Alfred A. Knopf.
T.J. and Jessica Stiles, at the 2009 National Book Awards
The Transition to Commodore Vanderbilt
Jesse James received a generous critical response. By the time it appeared, I had already started work on my next biography: The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt, published on April 21, 2009, also by Knopf. The Commodore, as Vanderbilt was called, lived from 1794 to 1877, leading an extraordinarily long and important career, yet (like Jesse James) had never been the subject of a satisfactory biography. And, like Jesse James, the Commodore was a man of action who left no papers behind, just a relatively few letters scattered in various collections. And, like Jesse James, Vanderbilt often wished to conceal his activities. But he was, of course, a far more public figure, and there is far more material to work with than there was with a man who lived underground for his entire adult life. In the course of about seven years dedicated to this book, I received some much-appreciated assistance. I was selected as a mentor for the Hertog Research Fellowship at Columbia University's School of the Arts, in which an MFA student worked as my research assistant. (I also taught a master class in nonfiction creative writing at Columbia). For the 2004-5 academic year, I was honored with selection as the first Gilder Lehrman Fellow in American History at the New York Public Library's Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers. Though I conducted research at three dozen different libraries and archives, I made the New York Public Library my research home, where I devoted many hours to the New York Central Railroad papers, among other collections. After my fellowship ended, I worked across the hall in the NYPL's Allen Room, a study for scholars and writers working on major projects.
T.J. Stiles, taken on May 24, 2010
Photograph by Nicholas Latimer, Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. From New York to San Francisco
The city of New York was my home for twenty years, from 1986 to 2006. I moved more than a dozen times since arriving there, living everywhere from West Harlem during the height of the crack epidemic to Park Slope, Brooklyn. I was in Brooklyn on September 11, 2001, making revisions to my Jesse James manuscript, when the burning smell of the World Trade Center entered my apartment. I last lived just off Riverside Drive on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. During my final years in New York, I met my future wife, a native of the California Bay Area. At the beginning of the summer of 2006, we moved to California, where we were married on July 3, 2006, at Kirkwood, a spot near Lake Tahoe regularly visited by gold rush migrants. In 2007, we moved to San Francisco, where we live in the Baker Beach neighborhood of the historic Presidio national park, overlooking the commercial shipping that enters and leaves the Golden Gate, following the channel once used by Commodore Vanderbilt's steamships. And it was in San Francisco, in 2007, that our son Dillon was born.
The Baker Beach neighborhood (red-and-white buildings, right of center in the distance) in the Presidio of San Francisco
Growing up as a country boy and sometimes aimless student, I worked a lot of odd jobs over the years. I poured concrete for hog pens; served as a 4-H program assistant; worked on a line at an electroplating plant; served as a janitor in the basement of the American Standard building; made telemarketing cold calls; manned the till at an inner-city liquor store; worked as an office temp; and filled tanks, fixed tires, and changed oil in a gas station. In publishing I worked as a copywriter, digesting manuscripts and producing catalog, jacket flap, and advertising copy. For more than a decade I have been a full-time writer. In addition to my books, I have authored articles and book reviews for the New York Times Book Review, the Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic online, Smithsonian, Salon.com, and other publications.
T.J. Stiles (right) accepting the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for Biography from President Lee Bollinger of Columbia University
Karate-Do
I've been an athlete all my life. In high school, I was a co-captain of the football team and won two district wrestling championships. When I was sixteen—while still wrestling and playing football—I began to practice traditional Shotokan karate (or "karate-do," as it's more formally known), which has become a lifelong passion.
T.J. Stiles practicing the kata Sochin, July 2010
T.J. Stiles teaching at the Japan Karate Association of New York in 2006
T.J. Stiles with, from left, Adel Ismail, 5th Dan, technical director of the JKA England, and Masataka Mori, 8th Dan, chief instructor of JKA Shotokan Karate-Do International and technical adviser for the Japan Karate Association
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