He has co-authored short stories and novels with Paul Harland, Eddy C. Bertin, Bies van Ede, Roderick Leeuwenhart, Roelof Goudriaan, and Jaap Boekestein.
Tais Teng is one of the founders of ziltpunk, a literary movement that seeks to counter the apathetic dismay of many dystopian novels.
Sixty-meter-high dikes, mangrove islands planted in the sea to counter flood waves, or even raising the land itself by injecting the underlying chalk layers with hydrogen sulfide are some key examples in the text.
Several ziltpunk stories have been published in English, such as Any House in the Storm, Tidal Treasures or Growing Up Along the Mile-High Dyke, Buitendyks, and Where the Night-Gulls Yodel.
[1] (English works only, see the Dutch Wikipedia version for novels in that language) Teng uses computer-generated fractals and kaleidoscopic mandalas to construct his landscapes.