Contributors
Kathleen Aponick has published poetry in Seneca Review, The
Worcester Review, Karamu, and other publications. She also published a
chapbook of poems, Near the River’s Edge (Pudding House Press). Walter
Bargen has published eight books of poetry. The most recent book, Harmonic
Balance, from Timberline Press was published in March 2001. He was the
winner of winner of the Chester H. Jones Foundation poetry prize in 1997. Tina
Barr’s on Cairo have appeared in Boudary 2, Chelsea, Crab Orchard
Review, and The Southern Review. A chapbook, The Fugitive Eye,
was selected by Yusef Komunyakaa as the winner of the Painted Bride Quarterly
contest and published in 1997. She directs the Creative Writing Program at
Rhodes College in Memphis. Christian Barter’s poems have appeared in The
Georgia Review, Tar River Poetry, The Louisville Review, and others. He is
a crew leader for Arcadia National Parks’s trail crews. Robert Bense has
poems forthcoming in Poetry, Seneca Review, and Salmagundi, among
other journals. Eileen Berry was born in England and lived in Africa
before coming to America. She holds a Ph.D. in Geography from Clark University.
Her poetry has been published in a number of journals and includes a Pushcart
nomination. She was an associate at the Atlantic Center for the Arts in 1992
with Amy Clampitt and in 1997 with David Lehman. Rebecca Black is a
Stegner Fellow at Stanford and is finishing an MFA from Indiana University. She
lives in the Mission District in San Francisco. Susan Briante is a
part-time translator living in Austin, Texas. Her work has appeared in New
American Writing, Indiana Review, and The Marlboro Review, among
other magazines. Nadia Colburn is a graduate student at Columbia
University where she is writing a dissertation on Auden, Ashbery and Merrill.
She lives with her husband and son in Boston. James Doyle and his wife
Sharon, who is also a poet, are retired. James has poetry in forthcoming issues
of the Midwest Quarterly, The Iowa Review, Cimarron Review, West Branch
and other journals. Tony D’Souza is a 2000 graduate of the ND Writing
Program. His stories have appeared and received awards in the US, UK,
Australia and New Zealand, in such journals as Stand, Black Warrior Review,
Imago, Takahe, Dark Horse, Barbaric Yawp and others. He is currently a
Peace Corps Volunteer in the Ivory Coast. Beth Ann Fennelly is an
Assistant Professor at Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois. Her poems have been
published in TriQuarterly, Poetry Ireland Review, and The Kenyon
Review. They have been republished in Best American Poetry, The 2001
Pushcart Prize, and Poets of the New Century. Charles Freeland
teaches creative writing at Sinclair Community College in Dayton, OH. His work
has appeared in The Carolina Quarterly, Free Lunch, The Midwest Quarterly,
New Orleans Review and many others. Kenneth Frost’s poems have
appeared in Salmagundi, Southwest Review, Confrontation, Chattahoochee
Review and others. He lives in Maine. John Gallaher’s book of poetry, Gentlemen in Turbans, Ladies in
Cauls is forthcoming in 2001. Other
guidebooks can be found in the Boston Review, Colorado Review, Iowa Review,
The Ohio Review, Fence, and others. Geoffrey Gardner’s poems, essays
and translations of poetry have been published widely for many years. Most
recently, he has translated and introduced Presence; Poems of Jean Follain
, published by Grace Paley and Robert Nichols’s Glad Day Books. With Taylor
Stoehr he has edited and introduced An Existing Better World; Notes on the
Bread & Puppet Theater by
George Dennison, published by Autonomedia, and he has edited and introduced Swords
That Shall Not Strike; Poems of Protest and Rebellion by Kenneth Rexroth, also from Glad Day
Books. John Gery’s forthcoming books include Gallery of Ghosts, a
collection of poems from Story Line Press, and Davenport’s Version, a
narrative poem of the Civil War in New Orleans, from Portals Press. He is a Research Professor of English at the
University of New Orleans and Director of the Ezra Pound Center for Literature,
Brunnenburg Castle, Italy. Mark Halperin teaches at Central Washington
University. His latest book,Time As
Distance, New Issues Press (University of Western Michigan), as well as a
chapbook, Now and Then, (March Street Press) and a Greatest Hits
(Pudding House Publications) appeared in 2001. John Hennessy’s poems
appear or are forthcoming in The Sewanee Review, Ontario Review, Washington
Square, Massachusetts Review, and Third Coast. He attended Princeton
on a scholarship and received his MFA from the University of Arkansas. Catherine
Kasper is an assistant professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio.
Her poetry and fiction is forthcoming in such journals as Timothy
McSweeney’s, American Letters & Commentary, and The Charter Oak
Review. Philip Kobylarz has had work appear in Connecticut
Review, Scrivener, Pleiades, Witness and Best American Poetry 1997.
His book of creative nonfiction, la france: A Speculative Journey, is
forthcoming from Upney Editions (Canada). He also writes book reviews for Memphis’
Daily The Commercial Appeal and teaches literature and writing at the
University of Memphis. Dale Kushner is a recipient of a Wisconsin Arts
Board Grant in the Literary Arts. Her poetry has been widely published in
journals including Crazyhorse, Salmagundi, Poetry, Hayden’s Ferry and
elsewhere. She has been studying myth and archetypal psychology at the CG Jung
Institute in Switzerland and is currently at work on a novel. Stacey Levine
is the author the novel Dra—. Her short story collection, My Horse
and Other Stories won the 1994 PEN/West fiction award. ‘The World of Barry’
will be published in the forthcoming anthology The Clear Cut Future
(Clear Cut Press, 2002). William Logan’s most recent books of poems are Vain
Empires and Night Battle (Penguin).
His book of essays and reviews, Reputations of the Tongue (Florida),
was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in Criticism. He teaches at the University of Florida. Jill
McDonough’s work has appeared in Poetry, The Massachusetts Review,
and Harvard Review. She was a
writing fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown. David Matlin
Patrick Moran’s poems have appeared in many magazines including The
New Republic, The Iowa Review, The Northwest Review and Hayden’s Ferry.
He currently teaches in the English Department at the University of
Wisconsin-Whitewater. Linda Lancione Moyer’s poems have appeared or are
forthcoming in Amherst Review, Crazyhorse, Poet Lore, Italian Americana, The
MacGuffin and elsewhere. She lives in Berkeley, California. G.E. Murray
is the author of seven collections of poetry, including Arts of a Cold Sun
(University of Illinois Press, 2003); the Devins Award-winning Repairs…Walking
the Blind Dog… and a book-length ‘mystery poem’ Oils of Evening:
Journeys in the Art Trade. Murry is co-editor (with Kevin Stein) of Illinois
Voices: An Anthology of Twentieth-Century Poetry. He occasionally teaches
creative writing at the University of Illinois-Chicago, and has served as a
board director of the Poetry Society of America and PEN/American Center. Martin
Ott’s poetry, fiction and essays have appeared in numerous magazines,
including Connecticut Review, Hawaii Review, The Midwest Quarterly, National
Forum, New Letters, Quality Paperback Literary Review, Rattle, Seattle Review,
Soundings East, The Southern California Anthology, Spoon River Poetry Review,
The Wisconsin Review, and Yearbook of American Poetry and Magazine Verse.
Robert Parham’s work has appeared in The Georgia Review, Connecticut
Review, America, Christian Science Monitor, Southern Poetry Review, and
many other journals. Poems are forthcoming in Hawaii Pacific Review,
Maryland Review and others. His chapbook, What Part Motion Plays in the Equation
of Love, appeared last year from Palanquin Press and his collection, The
Ghosts of Montparnasse, was a finalist for the Marianne Moore Poetry Prize.
Elise Partridge’s poems have been published or are forthcoming in Poetry,
The New Republic, The Southern Review, Boulevard, AGNI, Poetry Ireland Review
and elsewhere. She is editing a series of lectures by Robert Lowell. John Peck’s Collected Shorter
Poems 1966-1996 is slated to appear sometime in 2002 from Northwestern
U.P. Allan Peterson’s poetry has
appeared in the Bellingham Review, Green Mountains Review, and the Mid-American
Review. Work is forthcoming from Pleiades, and the Marlboro
Review. Last year he received a fellowship in poetry from the state of
Florida. Kathryn Rantala is the founder and co-editor of the Seattle
print journal Snow Monkey. Her poetry and prose have appeared widely.
Her collection Missing Pieces follows a chapbook, The Dark Man,
by some years. Michael G. Richards is the Creative Writing Program
Fellow at the University of Notre Dame and the Managing Editor of the Notre
Dame Review. His fiction and reviews have appeared in various journals. John
Ronan is a poet, teacher and journalist. His work has appeared in Threepenny
Review, New York Quarterly, New England Review and in other journals. He
has published three chapbooks, including The Curable Corpse (1999). In
1999 he was named a National Endowment for the Arts Fellow in Poetry. He lives
in Gloucester, MA. Michael Salcman is a physician, neuroscientist, and
occasional essayist on the visual arts. He served as chairman of the Department
of Neurosurgery at the University of Maryland and is vice-president of the
Board of the Contemporary Museum in Baltimore. Recent poems have appeared or
are forthcoming in the Harvard Review, The Comstock Review, Poem, The Cape
Rock, Whiskey Island Magazine, and the first issue of Stray Dog. His
first book of poems, Plow Into Winter, is in need of a publisher. Neil
Shepard has published two books of poetry: I’m Here Because I Lost My
Way (1998) and Scavenging the Country for a Heartbeat (1992), both
from Mid-List Press. Recent poems appear in The Paris Review, Ploughshares,
Boulevard, and Ontario Review. Shepard teaches in the BFA Writing
Program at Johnson State College in Vermont and edits the Green Mountain
Review. Richard Spilman has published poetry and fiction in numerous
magazines over the past twenty years. Most recently, his poems have appeared in
New Letters, Poetry and Hayden’s Ferry Review. His collection of
short fiction, Hot Fudge, was a New York Times Notable Book in 1990. Lisa
M. Steinman, who teaches at Reed College in Portland, Oregon, has been
awarded fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the
Rockefeller Foundation, and has published three volumes of poetr: Lost Poems
(Ithaca House); All That Comes To Light (Arrowood Books); and A Book
Of Other Days (Arrowood Books). Her
recent magazine publications include poems in Prairie Schooner, Chariton
Review, and The Women’s Review of Books. She also edits the poetry magazine, Hubbub. Donna Baier
Stein has received prizes from the Poetry Society of Virginia, a Bread Loaf
Scholarship, and a Fellowship from the John Hopkins University Writing
Seminars. Her novel Fortune won the PEN New England Discovery Award for
Fiction. Her story collection has been a Finalist in the Iowa Fiction Awards.
Her work has appeared in New York Stories, Kansas Quarterly, Prairie
Schooner, Florida Review, and many other journals and anthologies. She is
Poetry Editor of Bellevue Literary Review. Robert Stewart’s books
include Plumbers (BkMk Press) and Letters from the Living
(Borderline). He is Managing Editor for New Letters Magazine at the
University of Missouri-Kansas City. Marcela Sulak’s poetry has appeared
in such journals as Kalliope, Borderlands, X-connect, and Greenfuse. She has translated poetry from the French,
Czech, and Spanish, and is currently completing a 500-year history of the
Sephardic Jews of Venezuela. Arturo Vivante is best known for his short
stories. His latest collection is The Tales of Arturo Vivante, and his
latest book is Italian Poetry, an Anthology, (a translation). Lately he
has been writing plays. He lives in Cape Cod. Daniel Weissbort's latest
translation was Selected Poems of Nikolay Zabolotsky (Carcanet). Forthcoming from Anvil Press, in Spring
2002, is a poetry collection, Letters to Ted and From Russian with Love: A
Memoir of Joseph Brodsky. Tony Whedan’s poetry and essays have
appeared in American Poetry Review, Crazyhorse, Ploughshares, Shenandoah,
and many other magazines. He teaches at Johnson State College and co-edits The
Green Mountain Review.