Tom Wolfe (Tom Wolfe, Jr., born in 193 1) is an American journalist, writer and founder of new journalism. His reporting style is bold, featuring the use of slang, coinage and heretical punctuation. He has a far-reaching influence on the news movement. By describing the fashion culture at that time, Wolff's works skillfully grasped the mentality of people in the society at that time and satirically described American society. Electric Kuer -Aid Acid Test (1968) is one of his most famous novels, and it is a travel record of him and a group of hippies such as Ken Cosey and Merry plank. This book describes a group of hippies who seek self-realization by taking drugs, leading a bohemian life and traveling across the country.
Born in Richmond, Virginia, Wolff received his bachelor's degree from Washington University and Li Daxue, and his doctorate in philosophy from Yale University. Several of his books are accompanied by his own paintings.
Wolf's prose collection includes: Kandy Orange Streamlined Baby (1965), Pump House Gang (1968), Modern and Exquisite Service and Gunners (radical and chic and mau-maung anti-aircraft gunners) (1970), In our "Colored World" (1975) and "Bauhaus's Architecture to Our Home" (198 1) are criticisms of modern art and modern architecture. The correct material (1979) and the bonfire of vanity (1987).