Taylor is involved in writing and speaking about ocean issues, the environment and bringing attention to the complex realities of the US-Mexican Border. His book "The Coyote's Bicycle" is currently in development for a forthcoming television series.
Literary works
In his first book, Return by Water: Surf Stories and Adventures. Taylor takes readers traveling with him and illuminates surfers' lives around the world with amazing sense of place and deft character portraits of the famous, ordinary and irascible surfer alike. Published August 1, 2005 by Dimdim Publishing. In 2013, Taylor and Dimdim published a follow-up book, Drive Fast and Take Chances, about surf obsession. It contains profiles of 15 people notably fixated with riding, hunting down, and discovering waves. In 2008, while on assignment investigating thousands of tires that regularly wash down the Tijuana River during rains, Taylor stumbled upon a massive and mysterious pile of discarded bicycles. His unraveling the mystery of those thousands of bicycles became the genesis of his third book: The Coyote's Bicycle: The Untold Story of 7,000 Bicycles and the Rise of a Borderland Empire.
Articles
Kimball Taylor has written over 27 articles for Surfer Magazine. His story about secret spots and surf imperialism in Mainland Mexico, The Search, was published in Volume 15 number 6 of The Surfers Journal. He has also had work published in The Atlantic magazine.
Speaking Engagements
Kimball Taylor is sometimes asked to speak about writing and journalism. He also speaks on ocean issues from his years of writing for surfing journals, and following the publication of The Coyote's bicycle, Taylor is occasionally asked to speak on the issues of the Mexican border and the economics of illegal immigration, two issues that have gained prominence since Donald Trump made them a policy of his presidency. In 2016, he was asked to be part of a panel discussion of the US-Mexico border at the fourth annual San AntonioBook Festival. In 2017, he was asked to be on a panel discussion of California at the 22nd annual Los Angeles Times Festival of Books.