Contributors
A. J. Huffman is a poet and freelance writer in Daytona Beach, Florida. She has previously published her work in literary journals, in the U.K. as well as America, such as Avon Literary Intelligencer, Eastern Rainbow, Medicinal Purposes Literary Review, The Intercultural Writer's Review, Icon, Writer's Gazette, and The Penwood Review.
Alicia Banaszewski is a twenty-year-old undergraduate at Western Michigan University. She works at a movie theatre and has a a cross-eyed drooly cat named Donut. Her work has been previously featured in the Laureate.
Amorak Huey, after 15 years as a reporter and editor, recently abandoned the newspaper business and now teaches writing at Grand Valley State University in Michigan.
Anthony DiMatteo is a professor of English at a Long Island college where he looks down at the students storming his ivory tower, telling him it's made of white chocolate and threatening to blowtorch it down.
Bill Christophersen's work has appeared in such journals as Borderlands, Poetry, Shenandoah, Southwest Review and Southern Poetry Review. He lives in New York City.
Bill Yarrow is the author of Wrench (erbacce-press, 2009) and Wound Jewelry (new aesthetic, 2010). His poems have recently appeared in Blip, PANK, Poetry International, DIAGRAM, Ramshackle Review, LITSNACK, Blue Fifth Review, this, Used Furniture Review, Everyday Genius, and Istanbul Literary Review. He lives in Illinois.
Brad Rose was raised in southern California, and lives in Boston. His work has appeared in Right Hand Pointing, Third Wednesday, Off the Coast, Boston Literary Magazine, Tattoo Highway, Imagination and Place, SleetMagagazine.com, Six Sentences, Staccato, Fiction at Work, Monkeybicycle, Six Little Things, Short, Fast and Deadly, and other publications. Links to his poetry and fiction can be found here. Brad’s novelette, Lola Loves Richard, a tragicomedy set in contemporary Hollywood, told in 6-sentence chapters, is in progress.
Based in Singapore, Desmond Kon Zhicheng-Mingdé has edited more than ten books and co-produced three audio books. Trained in book publishing at Stanford University, Desmond studied sociology and mass communication at the National University of Singapore, and later received his theology masters (world religions) from Harvard University and fine arts masters (creative writing) from the University of Notre Dame. An interdisciplinary artist, Desmond also works in clay, with his ceramic works housed in museums and private collections in India, the Netherlands, the UK and the US.
Eric Burke works as a computer programmer in Columbus, Ohio. Recent work can be found in elimae, qarrtsiluni, Right Hand Pointing, Pank, A cappella Zoo, Word Riot and Weave Magazine. You can read his blog at http://anomalocrinus.blogspot.com/
Howie Good, a journalism professor at SUNY New Paltz, is greatly looking forward to sabbatical in Fall 2011.
Josh Bernstein is a writer from New York City. His works have appeared in The Coe Review, The Ugly Tree, Ballard Street Poetry Journal, Right Hand Pointing, and Thick With Conviction, among others. He has, until now, published his work under the pseudonym Josh Thompson. He is currently enrolled in a M.A. program at Brooklyn College where he studies English Education. He loves the work of Charles Bukowski and continuosly tries to find a way to bring him back to life.
Kathleen Kirk had to change her bio to this, because her life just keeps changing. She is so pleased to appear among these much better bios!
Katie Seling continues to possess no writing degrees or other positions of credibility. She insists that you suggest improvements to her.
Marc Swan has been in the po-biz for twenty years, some solid publications, including three books of poems, but never could quit the day job. C'est la vie mon ami...
Mather Schneider's writing, much of which is inspired by his work as a taxi driver, has appeared in a number of issues of Right Hand Pointing and on our first-person "true" story site, Left Hand Waving.
Michael Gause has thought many times about changing his name. He's more often a bridesmaid and doesn't mind except for the poofy sleeves. He is originally from TN but never felt it until he left. He enjoys rock climbing, but only if it is followed by the word 'Joel.'
Michael A. Wells is a poet, a baseball aficionado, lover of wine and a Diet Coke addict. He makes his home in a Kansas City, Missouri suburb with his wife and pets. He began his stint as a poet in mid-1990 as experimental attempt to devise a loophole to mortality. He'll let you know how it works out for him.
A recent status update on Scot Siegel’s Facebook page reads: “falafel should not sound like feelawful. but then who said life is fair. my last name was supposed to be golden eagle.”
Scott H. Stoller is a practicing physician in Chicago. His work has been published in journals such as Frog Pond, decomP, Ribbons, and tinfoil dresses.
Spooner Sakamoto makes digital art depicting obsolete technologies, such as vacuum tubes, Quaaludes, and first-generation iPads. He is the same person as someone else.
Thomas Hawk (cover photo) maintains an amazing photography blog at Thomas Hawk Digital Collection.
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