Age, Biography and Wiki

Tom Spanbauer was born on 1946 in Pocatello, Idaho, U.S., is an American writer (born 1946). Discover Tom Spanbauer's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 78 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation Author
Age 78 years old
Zodiac Sign
Born 1946, 1946
Birthday 1946
Birthplace Pocatello, Idaho, U.S.
Nationality Idaho

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1946. He is a member of famous writer with the age 78 years old group.

Tom Spanbauer Height, Weight & Measurements

At 78 years old, Tom Spanbauer height not available right now. We will update Tom Spanbauer's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

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Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

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Tom Spanbauer Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Tom Spanbauer worth at the age of 78 years old? Tom Spanbauer’s income source is mostly from being a successful writer. He is from Idaho. We have estimated Tom Spanbauer's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
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Source of Income writer

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Timeline

1946

Tom Spanbauer (born 1946) is an American writer whose work often explores issues of sexuality, race, and the ties that bind disparate people together.

Raised in Idaho, Spanbauer has lived in Kenya and across the United States.

He lives in Portland, Oregon, where he teaches a course titled "dangerous writing".

1987

Volume 1 of The Quarterly, published in the 1987 spring edition, featured Spanbauer's "Sea Animals."

Spanbauer's novels are written in first person and connected to the author's personal life; in an interview with Judy Reeves for San Diego Writers, Ink], Spanbauer said:

"There's something very troubling inside me, something that won't let me go. It's tossing me about and I am in fear and I am helpless. When I finally sit down to look at this thing that scares me, I make myself a deal to tell the truth no matter what. I write one paragraph and my narrator breaks the deal and begins to lie. There are no rules except that I can't forsake my original intention. To find that hidden thing [that is] driving me nuts."

His novels The Man Who Fell in Love with the Moon, Now is the Hour, and Faraway Places take place in his home state of Idaho.

With In the City of Shy Hunters, Spanbauer breaks this pattern, setting much of the action in New York.

His current novel I Loved You More hopscotches back and forth from Idaho to New York, San Francisco, and Portland, Oregon, all places where Spanbauer has lived and worked.

In Faraway Places, Spanbauer's first novel, young Jake Weber witnesses the murder of a Native American woman and is forced to reevaluate the community he was raised in.

This coming of age story was hailed by A. M. Homes as "a family drama with a pitch perfect crescendo."

The Los Angeles Times stated that "in his promising but uneven first novel, a coming-of-age story set in the early 50s, Tom Spanbauer writes convincingly as a teen-age boy bewildered by events that destroy his family's rural life."

1988

He graduated in 1988 from Columbia University with an MFA in Fiction and has written five novels.

As a gay writer, Spanbauer has explored issues of race and sexual identity, and has stated on his website that his work also addresses "how we make a family for ourselves in order to surmount the limitations of the families into which we are born."

Spanbauer's childhood in Idaho influences his writing.

He attended Idaho State University and Columbia.

He also was a member of the Peace Corps in Kenya.

Spanbauer is the creator of the concept of dangerous writing, a technique he teaches with the philosophy outlined below:

Dangerous Writing focuses on a minimalistic style and "writing from the body," the act of overcoming fear to write painful personal truths.

According to Spanbauer, approximately forty of his students have published memoirs and novels.

In keeping with the thread of autobiography that runs through his novels "by the time his first novel was published... in 1988, Spanbauer had already descended into Shed's twisted world, where morality, sexuality, and race are gigantic question marks," and he admits to going to "a very, very dark place" while writing The Man Who Fell in Love with the Moon.

In the City of Shy Hunters follows Will Parker from the Northwest to New York, where the specter of AIDS looms large.

1992

The Man Who Fell in Love with the Moon was a finalist for the 1992 Stonewall Book Award.

Stephen Dubner, writing for New York Magazine, describes the novel as "a sprawling tragicomedy set in a gold-rush town called Excellent, Idaho. Shed, who is definitely bisexual and most likely mixed race, shares time, beds, and whiskey bottles with a pair of loving, flamboyant prostitutes and a soulful rancher who might be his father. The book is equal parts bizarre Bildungsroman, raucous picaresque, and hard-driving wild-West yarn."

1996

Salon Magazine's Peter Kurth reminds the reader that Spanbauer's "fiction, while riding on conventional coming-of-age, coming-to-terms, coming-out plots, is unlike any you've read or are likely to read before this epidemic ends. Yes, AIDS provides the thematic backdrop of In the City of Shy Hunters. Yes, Spanbauer himself was diagnosed with "full-blown" AIDS in 1996. But In the City of Shy Hunters is so finely crafted, Spanbauer's characters so true to life, the New York City he remembers from the early days of the plague so exactly captured in its "unrelenting" mess and glory, you'll think you've been reading a modernist classic by the time you're through, rather than the latest entry in an artificial, post-post genre."

Publishers Weekly called it "a big, brazen, histrionic work of fiction."

Now is the Hour returns to the bildungsroman arcs of earlier Spanbauer novels, opening as young Rigby John leaves his small town behind for San Francisco.

Entertainment Weekly favored the novel, writing this review:

Although criticized from some corners as following a commonplace plot, Now is the Hour has been praised for its "strikingly beautiful writing… even the one climactic moment of violence is tender and dreamlike."

I Loved You More is the first of Spanbauer's novels to address his personal struggle coping with HIV and AIDS, as well as male bisexuality, through the looping narrative of main character Ben Grunewald.

Lambda Literary Foundation gave I Loved You More a positive review, closing with this statement: