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Contributors
Mary Christine Delea
is author of The Skeleton Holding Up the Sky (Main Street Rag Press, 2006), as well as two chapbooks and many other published poems. Her poems are upcoming in new ohio review, Mid-American Review, Zone 3, and New Mexico Poetry Review, among other journals.
James Hannibal (Cover artist and Gallery feature)
worked three years as the photo editor & photojournalist at the Sentinel Newspaper in Coeur d’Alene ID, four years as photojournalist for The Rathdrum Star Newspaper and two years as photographer for the College Relations Department at North Idaho College. He has won nine awards from the Society of Professional Journalism and his work has appeared in galleries in Oregon, California, Washington, Florida, Idaho, Canada, and Switzerland. His photography has been published over 100 times in over 30 publications.
Kate Krautkramer
has appeared or is forthcoming in publications such as Colorado Review, Creative Nonfiction, Fiction, Mississippi Review, National Geographic, The New York Times, The North American Review, So To Speak, Southern Humanities Review, The Seattle Review, South Dakota Review, Washington Square, Weber: The Contemporary West, Quarter After Eight, and Zone 3, as well as in the anthologies The Beacon Best and The Best American Nonrequired Reading, and Best of the West 2010. She has also been featured on National Public Radio’s Morning Edition and Day to Day. She lives with her husband and children in rural, Northwest Colorado, where she teaches writing at South Routt Elementary School.
Robert Hill Long
has published poems and flash fictions in Kenyon Review, Poetry, Sentence, Del Sol Review, Manoa, Zyzzyva, The Best of The Prose Poem, and many other journals. His manuscript of sonnet sequences, The Kilim Dreaming, narratives and elegies, won the 2010 Dorothy Brunsman Prize and appears this fall from Bear Star Press in California. His earlier books include The Work of the Bow (poems) and The Effigies (flash fictions).
Ronald Moran
lives in Simpsonville, SC. Moran has published 10 collections of poetry, the most recent being Waiting (Clemson University Digital Press, 2009), two books of criticism (one coauthored), and hundreds of poems, essays, and reviews in a number of journals, including Commonweal, Northwest Review, Southern Poetry Review, Southern Review, and Tar River Poetry. His eleventh book of poetry The Jane Poems, is currently in press, for release in early 2011.
Lee Passarella
is a founding member and senior literary editor of Atlanta Review and acted as editor-in-chief of FutureCycle Poetry and Coreopsis Books. His poetry has appeared in Chelsea, Cream City Review, Louisville Review, The Sun, Antietam Review, Journal of the American Medical Association, The Formalist, Iodine Poetry Review, Cortland Review, and many other periodicals. Recent publications include Eclectica and In Posse Review. Forthcoming are poems in Ambit (UK) and Mad Poets Review.
Swallowed up in Victory, Passarella’s long narrative poem based on the American Civil War, was published by White Mane Books in 2002. In addition, he has published two other books of poetry: The Geometry of Loneliness (David Roberts Books) and Sight-Reading Schumann (Pudding House Publications).
Simon Perchik
is an attorney whose poems have appeared in Partisan Review, The New Yorker and elsewhere. For more information, including his essay “Magic, Illusion and Other Realities” and a complete bibliography, please visit his website at www.simonperchik.com.
Helen R. Peterson
is the managing editor of Chopper Poetry Journal out of New London, Ct, and has previously published in over 100 print and online journals, both nationally and internationally. Her work was also featured in The Work Book, an anthology put out by Poet Plant Press in 2007. She will be reading at the Bowery Poetry Club in Manhattan in November. A mother of three, she lives in Connecticut and works in the local schools.
Her blog can be found at: mspetersonexplains.wordpress.com.
Don Russ
is the author of a book of poems, Dream Driving (Kennesaw State University Press, 2007), which can be ordered through Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Borders.
Erik Tschekunow
is an assistant professor of English at Silver Lake College in Wisconsin and holds an MFA from Emerson College. His poems have most recently appeared in Tar River Poetry and Arsenic Lobster.
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