Thomas M. Disch was born in
1940 in
Des Moines,
Iowa. He attended
Catholic school but was generally a free-thinker and often in conflict with the religious authorities around him. He worked as a
library page when he was 15 and was there exposed to a lecture by a member of the Ballets Russe, leading him to take
ballet classes for two years; he credits this experience with teaching him
self-discipline and giving him a chance to meet other
non-conformists.
After high school he went into the Army briefly but was soon discharged. Then he attended NYU for a while, but left the university after making his first writing sale, the science fiction story "The Double Timer" to Fantastic Magazine. He worked in advertising on and off while writing and making a name for himself in the 1960s "new wave" of science fiction. His 1969 novel Camp Concentration is an SF classic. By 1970 he was also publishing poetry and soon would be writing in other fiction genres. He and his longtime companion Charles Naylor also co-edited several anthologies in the 1970s. In 1978 he wrote the children's story "The Brave Little Toaster" which was rejected by children's publishers, eventually appearing in the magazine Fantasy and Science Fiction and being optioned by Disney for an animated movie which would come out in 1987. (He also wrote the book which became the first sequel, "The Brave Little Toaster Goes To Mars.") He has also done book reviews and theater criticism, and most recently has been known in the SF community for the book of critical essays The Dreams Our Stuff Is Made Of: How Science Fiction Conquered the World in 1998.
Source: mostly http://www.michaelscycles.freeserve.co.uk/bio.htm, some
http://www.writersreps.com/live/catalog/authors/discht.html