Tobias Carroll

Tobias Carroll lives and writes in New York City, and has been covering a wide variety of subjects — including (but not limited to) books, soccer and drinks — for many years. His writing has been published by the likes of the Los Angeles Times, Pitchfork, Literary Hub, Vulture, Punch, the New York Times and Men's Journal.

At InsideHook, he has written about everything from Icelandic whiskey to soccer supporter culture to automotive design, as well as a monthly look at new and notable books. Carroll is equally at home writing a detailed account of the making of a documentary or unearthing an undertold story from a historical archive. Learning what the full story behind something is — and finding unexpected connections between different creative disciplines — are among his main areas of interest.

Carroll also writes a monthly column on literature in translation for Words Without Borders. He is the author of four books, most recently a novel, Ex-Members, and Political Sign, a work of nonfiction published as part of the Object Lessons series from Bloomsbury. If prompted, he can and will talk at length about his fondness for Tottenham Hotspur and the New York Red Bulls.

All Articles From Tobias Carroll

Dodge Discontinued the Viper in 2017. People Are Still Buying New Ones.

Perusing car sales data reveals some interesting facts

Writings By and About Former Nintendo CEO Satoru Iwata Collected in New Book

"Ask Iwata: Words of Wisdom from Satoru Iwata, Nintendo's Legendary CEO" will be out later this year

Oyster Farming Might Just Help Revitalize the Ocean

Inside a different kind of sustainable farming

New Documentary Explores the Cut of "Uncle Buck" We Never Got to See

Including weird school lunches and a fight scene for the ages

Joe DiMaggio Almost Appeared on a "Seinfeld" Episode

File under: legendary cameos that never quite happened

Michael Apted, "Up" Series and "The World Is Not Enough" Director, Dead at 79

He also directed "Coal Miner's Daughter" and "Continental Divide," among others

New General Motors Logo Features Biggest Changes Since the 1960s

GM doesn't change its logo all that often, after all

During the Capitol Breach, Plainclothes Officers Had Tape on Their Guns. Why?

At a time of widespread firearms, it's done for practical reasons

Mexico City House From Alfonso Cuarón’s “Roma” Is for Sale

22 Tepeji Street has become a tourist destination

Last Known Civil War Widow Dies at 101

Helen Viola Jackson married a Union veteran in 1936, when he was 93 and she was 17

The New Western Canon: 15 Modern Western Books That Revived America’s Quintessential Genre

From Cormac McCarthy to Louise Erdrich, these latter-day frontier tales wrestle with a storied but fraught tradition

Golf Course Built on Ancient Ceremonial Earthworks Faces Lawsuit

The accessibility of a historical site is at stake