Pauls Toutonghi


Pauls Harijs Toutonghi is a first-generation American fiction and non-fiction writer. He was born in Seattle, Washington, to immigrant parents. His mother emigrated from Latvia, his father emigrated from Egypt and was of Syrian descent.
His first novel, Red Weather, was published by Random House/Shaye Areheart Books in 2006. His second, Evel Knievel Days, was published by Random House/Crown in 2012.
Red Weather was widely—and favorably—reviewed. Toutonghi has published work in Sports Illustrated, The Burnside Review, Glimmer Train, The Boston Review, One Story Magazine, and The New Yorker. His story, "Regeneration" won a Pushcart Prize in 2000. His 2016 non-fiction narrative, Dog Gone: A Lost Pet's Extraordinary Journey and the Family Who Brought Him Home, was the source for the 2023 Netflix film, Dog Gone.
Toutonghi received his MFA in poetry from Cornell University in 2003, followed by a PhD in English Literature in 2006. After his first novel was published, he moved from Brooklyn, New York to Portland, Oregon, where he now teaches as a Professor of English at Lewis and Clark College, specializing in Fiction and Creative Nonfiction Writing.

Works

Fiction

Short stories

  • Regeneration. The Boston Review, 2000
  • Homecoming. The Boston Review, 2001Live Cargo. Livingston Press, 2003

Novels

Red Weather. Random House, 2006Evel Knievel Days. Random House, 2012The Refugee Ocean. Simon & Schuster, 2023

Non-fiction

Books

Dog Gone: A Lost Pet's Extraordinary Journey and the Family Who Brought Him Home. Knopf, 2016

Essays

Personal life

He is married to the writer Peyton Marshall, and is the father of twins. His sister, Annette Toutonghi, is a professional actor. His father, Joseph Toutonghi, died in December 2017.