As a reporter for
The Seattle Times, he and two colleagues won the 1997
Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting for a five-part series about fraud and mismanagement in the Federal Indian Housing Program. After the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Tizon and photographer Alan Berner drove from
Seattle to Ground Zero in
New York City, chronicling their journey with a multi-part series called "Crossing America – Dispatches From a New Nation," which explored the changes brought about by the attacks. In 2002, he and Berner made another trip to Ground Zero, this time taking a southern route, and produced the series, "Crossing America – One Year Later." Tizon was Seattle Bureau Chief for the
Los Angeles Times from 2003 to 2008. Towards the end of his life, he wrote a piece in
The Atlantic about Eudocia Tomas Pulido, a
Filipina peasant woman who was his family's slave. Pulido helped to raise Tizon's mother, all of her children and Tizon's daughters without compensation. The story was the last Tizon would write before he died.
Big Little Man He expanded upon his journalistic themes—exiles, immigrants, social outcasts, people searching for identity or purpose—in a personal way in his book
Big Little Man: In Search of My Asian Self. Tizon told his own story as a first-generation immigrant and an Asian male growing up in the United States to examine cultural mythologies related to race and gender, in particular the Western stereotypes of Asian men and women. == Personal life ==