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Contributors

S.J. Brooks


teaches fiction writing and composition at the University of Arizona, where he is a second-year student in the MFA program. His work appears online in the current issue of Eclectica Magazine.

Cameron Conaway
is a graduate student and the Poet-in-Residence at the University of Arizona. He teaches youth in juvenile detentions, vocational schools, and UA Honors classes as part of Inside/Out: A Poetry and Sustainability nonprofit in Tucson, Arizona.

Richard Dinges Jr.
has an MA in literary studies from the University of Iowa and manages business systems at an insurance company. Steam Ticket, Hurricane Review, Wisconsin Review, Flint Hills Review, and Nebo have most recently published his poems.

George Moore
has published poems with The Atlantic Monthly, The North American Review, Poetry, Nimrod, Meridian, Chelsea, Colorado Review, Southern Review, and others. His collections include Headhunting (Edwin Mellen, 2002), The Petroglyphs at Wedding Rocks & Other Poems (Edwin Mellen, 1997), and The Long Way Around (Wyndham Hall, 1992). He has a recent CD, Tree in the Wall (CDchapbooks.com 2006) and an e-Book, All Night Card Game in the Back Room of Time (DPP Publishing, 2007). He was a finalist in 2007 for the Richard Snyder Memorial Prize from Ashland Poetry Press in Ohio, and also recently for The National Poetry Series, the Brittingham Poetry Award, and the Anhinga Poetry Prize. He teaches literature and writing with the University of Colorado, Boulder.

J. Trent Nutting
is a former English teacher and current graduate student whose work has appeared in the Long River Review and earned third prize in the Wallace Stevens Poetry Contest.

Oliver Rice
has received the Theodore Roethke Prize and twice been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. His poems have appeared widely in journals and anthologies in the United States, as well as in Canada, England, Austria, Turkey, and India. His book of poems, On Consenting to Be a Man, has been introduced by Cyberwit, a diversified publishing house in the cultural capital Allahabad, India, and is available on Amazon.

Joshua Michael Stewart
is the editor of the online magazine Big Toe Review (www.bigtoereview.com). He has two chapbooks: Ordinary Mysteries, published by White Heron Press in 2004, and Vintage Gray, published by Pudding House Press in 2007. Mr. Stewart's poems have been published in Massachusetts Review, Rattle, Georgetown Review, William and Mary Review, Flint Hills Review, Pedestal Magazine, and Worcester Review.

John T. Trigonis
is an MFA graduate of Brooklyn College and teaches as an adjunct instructor at William Paterson and Fairleigh Dickinson Universities, as well as New Jersey City University, his alma mater, where he attained his BA in English in 2001. He has had poetry published in Harpur Palette (2008), Iodine Poetry Journal (2007), The Homestead Review (2007), The California Quarterly (2007), Iota (2005 and 2006), First Time (2005), Splizz (2006 and 2007), Barbaric Yawp (2005), The Brooklyn Review (2002 and 2003), Soul Fountain (1999, 2000, and 2006), and many other domestic and international journals and literary magazines. Recently, He is also an independent filmmaker. His short, The Coconut was screened at three film festivals internationally in 2007.

Mark Wisniewski
is the author of One Of Us One Night, Confessions Of A Polish Used Car Salesman, and All Weekend With The Lights On. He's won a Pushcart Prize, the 2006 Tobias Wolff Award, the 2006 Cattarulla Award, the 2006 Gival Press Short Story Award, and a 2006 Isherwood Foundation Fellowship, and his work is published or forthcoming in venues including Poetry, Antioch Review, Triquarterly, Virginia Quarterly Review, The Southern Review, Barrelhouse, New York Quarterly, Post Road, Ibbetson Street, The Georgia Review, New England Review, The Missouri Review, The Gettysburg Review, Black Warrior Review, Mississippi Review, Indiana Review, Boulevard, The Yale Review, Confrontation, Southern Humanities Review, Fish Drum, Connecticut Poetry Review, Crazyhorse, Poetry International, The Sun, Smartish Pace, The Hollins Critic, and The Best American Short Stories 2008.

Jennifer Yaros
received her M.A. in Liberal Studies, Concentration: English, from Valparaiso University, and she currently teaches high school English. Her poetry, fiction, and essays have appeared in various literary publications, including Plath Profiles and Valparaiso Poetry Review, among others.
Stickman End of Poem

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