TK Kenyon


Biography

TK Kenyon is an Iowa Writers’ Workshop graduate, novelist, award-winning short story writer, pharmaceutical industry regulatory consultant, technical writer, molecular virologist, neuroscientist, minivan-driving mom, happy wife, cat slave, P90X devotee, surfer, high-handicap golfer, scuba diver, gourmet chef, mostly vegetarian, chocolatier, gardener, capsaicin addict, caffeine junkie, Apache and Scot descendant, native Arizonan, Connectikite, nouveau feminist, political moderate with extremist tendencies, radical atheist, Buddhist-curious, occasional UU, Tamil Ayer Brahmin Hindu by marriage, ex-actress, grown-up child beauty queen, PhD, MFA, BS (in so many ways), ASU Sun Devil, Iowa Hawkeye, UPenn Quaker, and always looking for something interesting to do.

Where to find TK Kenyon online


Books

What To Eat When You Eat Out Gluten Free PHOENIX / SCOTTSDALE ARIZONA EDITION    by TK Kenyon
Price: Free! 7730 words. Published on January 26, 2012. Nonfiction.

If you travel to the Phoenix / Scottsdale, Arizona area and eat gluten-free, this indispensable ebook lists local restaurants and local chains that serve gluten-free food. Each listing includes: - Whether they have a gluten-free menu and where - All GF items on the menu - Whether they carry GF products like GF buns or pasta This ebook is optimized for smartphones, ereaders, and tablets.
What To Eat When You Eat Out Gluten Free    by TK Kenyon
Price: $2.99 USD. 20910 words. Published on December 12, 2011. Nonfiction.

Eating out at restaurants with celiac disease / gluten reaction is like playing gluten roulette. This indispensable reference ebook lists 60 US restaurant chains, hyperlinked from an index, from Applebee’s to Z Pizza. Thirty-three restaurant chains are rated Good. Seven are Not Recommended due to serious concerns. Optimized for smartphones, ereaders, and tablets.
Jitterbugging with The Bomb    by TK Kenyon
Price: $1.99 USD. 24350 words. Published on October 21, 2011. Fiction.

A compilation of four award-winning stories about the WWII era by TK Kenyon, previously published in literary journals, now together for the first time. STARRED REVIEW “...quite unlike most standard commercial fare ... a genre-bending story, part thriller, part literary slapdown, that makes us laugh, wince, and reflect. Kenyon is definitely a keeper." -David Pitt, Booklist
American Stories    by TK Kenyon
Price: $1.99 USD. 21800 words. Published on October 14, 2011. Fiction.

A compilation of seven award-winning stories by TK Kenyon, previously published in literary journals, now together for the first time. Starred Review: “...quite unlike most standard commercial fare, a genre-bending story-part thriller, part literary slapdown with dialogue as the weapon of choice- makes us laugh, wince, and reflect all at the same time. Kenyon is definitely a keeper." --Booklist
Hooligan Navy: A Short Story    by TK Kenyon
Price: $0.99 USD. 15940 words. Published on August 8, 2011. Fiction.

When Eve Johnson, home during the summer of 1942, witnesses a Nazi U-boat torpedo a merchant marine ship off the Nantucket coast, she is determined to stop the attacks. The Coastal Picket Patrol, AKA the “Hooligan Navy,” forms to scout for U-boats, but they won’t induct girls. Eve vows to scout on her own, even though her family and the Hooligan Navy itself tries to stop her. (50 pages)
The Law of Large Numbers    by TK Kenyon
Price: $0.99 USD. 7600 words. Published on June 21, 2011. Fiction.

Frank Tyra, a physics graduate student, can’t pay his tuition or buy ramen noodles because his blackjack team went bust. When one of his undergraduate students offers to bankroll a new team, Frank teaches a bunch of frat boys to count cards in Las Vegas. Arizona State is a party school, and when his new team starts to party away their big chance, Frank has figure out how to survive.
Nag Is Hindi for Cobra    by TK Kenyon
Price: $0.99 USD. 8690 words. Published on June 14, 2011. Fiction.

Indian parents are very protective of their children. They berate, they cajole, and they nag. Minda tried to live her own life in the whirl of color and light of the theater, but when her parents applied the pressure, she caved. Now, she’s in graduate school in Iowa, but she can only pretend to be a nice, traditional Indian girl for so long before she cracks.

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