Thom Dunn is a writer, musician, and utterly terrible dancer. He is the co-lead singer and guitarist for the indie rock band the Roland High Life as well as a staff writer for the New York Times' Wirecutter and a regular contributor to BoingBoing. As a journalist and political commentator, he has appeared on several national and international radio programs, and written for Upworthy, the Weather Channel, Vice, and more. Thom is also a Huntington Playwriting Fellow, whose work has been commissioned by Cornell University and performed and read in cities from Boston to New York to Hollywood to Alaska. His fiction and other writing is represented by Kepner Agency, and has been published by Serial Pulp Magazine, Crossed Genres/Hidden Youth, Quirk Books, Tor.com, Asimov's, Grayhaven Comics...
Thom Dunn is a writer, musician, and utterly terrible dancer. He is the co-lead singer and guitarist for the indie rock band the Roland High Life as well as a staff writer for the New York Times' Wirecutter and a regular contributor to BoingBoing. As a journalist and political commentator, he has appeared on several national and international radio programs, and written for Upworthy, the Weather Channel, Vice, and more. Thom is also a Huntington Playwriting Fellow, whose work has been commissioned by Cornell University and performed and read in cities from Boston to New York to Hollywood to Alaska. His fiction and other writing is represented by Kepner Agency, and has been published by Serial Pulp Magazine, Crossed Genres/Hidden Youth, Quirk Books, Tor.com, Asimov's, Grayhaven Comics, Ninth Art Press, and others. In addition to his work with the Roland High Life, Thom also performs Irish folk music at pubs across the northeast, and plays guitar and keyboards in Boston's premiere Taylor Swift cover band. You can find his solo recordings on Spotify, iTunes, and BandCamp as well. A graduate of Emerson College and the Clarion Writer’s Workshop at the Arthur C. Clarke Center for Human Imagination, Thom enjoys mythophysics, robots and whiskey, and Oxford commas, and firmly believes that Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believing” is the single greatest atrocity ever committed against mankind. He lives in Boston with his family and way too many weird stringed instruments. Tá Gaeilge agam. he/him/sé/é