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Authors for Issue 2.3! PDF Print E-mail
Written by Coach Culbertson   
Saturday, 26 July 2008

 You have to see Issue 2.3 to believe the amount of amazing work we've packed into it! Pre-Sales are now open--click here to pre-order your copy now at a special low price! 
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Announcing Issue 2.2 Authors! PDF Print E-mail
Written by Coach Culbertson   
Wednesday, 14 May 2008
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We are very proud to announce our Authors for Issue 2.2! Once again, we bring you not only fresh new voices on the literary scene but also veteran authors with strong writing resumes. Read on to get to know who you'll be reading! 

  Amanda Auchter
Genesis
Pyx
The Ecstasy of St. Theresa
Poetry

Amanda Auchter is the editor of Pebble Lake Review and the recipient of the 2007 Theodore Morrison Poetry Scholarship from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, the 2006 BOMB Magazine Poetry Prize, and the 2005 James Wright Poetry Award from Mid-American Review.  Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in American Poetry Review,  Best New Poets 2006, Court Green, Crab Orchard Review, The Iowa Review, Poetry Daily, and others.  She lives in Houston, Texas and is completing her MFA in Poetry from Bennington College.
 Elinor Benedict
Mr. Malloy’s Miracle
Fiction

Elinor Benedict writes poetry, fiction and nonfiction, and she served as founding editor of Passages North literary magazine and Passages North Anthology. She won the Mademoiselle Fiction Prize years ago when she was an undergraduate, and she more recently won the Andre Dubus Short Fiction Award from Words and Images. Her poetry collection, All That Divides Us (Utah State Univ. Press, 2000), won the May Swenson Poetry Award. Her new collection, Late News from the Wilderness, is going the rounds. She is a grandmother who lives in Michigan and Florida and likes to dig in the garden. 
  Mary M. Brown
Memorial Service
Paper Scissors Rock
Feeling Fattheotokos
Poetry

I teach literature and creative writing at Indiana Wesleyan University and have published poetry and essays in a many journals including Artful Dodge, The Cresset, and Tar River Poetry.  I have poems forthcoming in Alimentum, Fourth River, and Christian Century.
 Rubén Degollado
Maggie Magic Fingers
Fiction

Rubén Degollado’s work has appeared in Beloit Fiction Journal, Bilingual Review, Gulf Coast, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Image and Fantasmas, an anthology of Chicano horror stories.  He is a youth leader and board chair at Trinity Project, and has been part of that church family during his time in Oregon.  He has been an educator for over eleven years and is now a middle school principal in the Hillsboro School District.  Aside from writing, he enjoys spending time with his wife Julie, son Elijah and all of their friends. 
  Elrena Evans
Fitting In
Editor’s Choice for Creative Nonfiction

Elrena Evans holds an MFA from The Pennsylvania State University and is co-editor of Mama, PhD: Women Write about Motherhood and Academic Life (Rutgers University Press 2008). Her writing also appears in the anthologies Twentysomething Essays by Twentysomething Writers (Random House 2006) and How to Fit a Car Seat on a Camel (Seal Press 2008), and in Brain, Child: The Magazine for Thinking Mothers, Episcopal Life, DreamSeeker, and Literary Mama, where she writes the monthly column Me and My House. She had no complications with her second pregnancy, and lives in Pennsylvania with her family. Her website is http://www.elrenaevans.com .
 Margaret Hammitt-Mcdonald
This is My Body
Apologia Medici
Creative Nonfiction

Margaret Hammitt-McDonald lives and practices naturopathic medicine in Gresham, Oregon. She enjoys writing science fiction, essays, and poetry, as well as reveling in the glories of the creation via hiking, dragonboating, bicycling, and tending to her organic garden, where generativity and entropy always exist together in dynamic tension. She enjoys life with her husband, Seth Goldstein, and nine rescued cats.
 Matthew E. Henry
Theotokos
Poetry

MEH is an English/Philosophy teacher from Boston and Denver, who is currently working towards his MFA at Seattle Pacific University. MEH has works appearing in various journals and anthologies including Becoming Fire (ANTS), Coloring Book (RattleCat), Credenda Agenda, Poetry East, and Relief.
 Cathy James
Speaking for Kingsley
Editor’s Choice for Fiction

Cathy’s short stories and essays have been published in Utne, Maelstrom, The Philosophical Mother, Ghoti Magazine, Victoria Press, Heliotrope, and WNCWoman, among others. Some of her writing awards include the Mona Schreiber Award for Fiction, a National League of Pen Women’s Soul-Making Literary Prize, and the best novel award in the Virginia-Highlands Creative Writing Festival.  Her work has also been aired on Georgia Peachstate Public Radio and on the Isothermal public radio network across the south. One of those stories, “A Virgin Mary of Our Very Own,”won a National Public Radio News Director’s award. Most recently she recorded a series of short stories to be aired on public radio’s “River and Sound Review,” based in Seattle, Washington, in 2008.  She teaches English at Montreat College in Montreat, North Carolina.
 Mike Jurkovic
3000 and Counting
Look No Less Upon These Eyes
Poetry

Co-director of the Calling All Poets Reading Series, Beacon, NY & founder/host of the annual Hudson Valley Poets Fest. Poems have appeared/are forthcoming in over fifty literary magazines, including South Carolina Review, Comstock Review, Xavier Review, Confluence, Baltimore Review, MSR, & Wisconsin Review. Anthologies: Riverine (Codhill Press, 2007), Will Work For Peace (Zeropanik,1999), Dyed-In-The-Wool: A Hudson River Poetry Anthology (Vivisphere,2001). CD reviews appear in Elmore Magazine,  Folk and Acoustic Music Exchange. My column, The Rock ‘n Roll Curmudgeon, appeared in Rhythm and News Magazine 1997-2004. I loves Emily most of all
  Helga Kidder
Hungry Mother State Park
Zeitgeist
Poetry

Helga Kidder has lived in the Tennessee hills for 30 years, raised two daughters, a half a dozen cats, and a few dogs.  She received a BA in English from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga and an MFA from Vermont College, Montpelier. She is co-founder of the Chattanooga Writers Guild and leads their poetry group.  Her poetry and translations have appeared in The Louisville Review, The Southern Indiana Review, The Spoon River Poetry Review, Eleventh Muse, Comstock Review, Snake Nation Review and others as well as in several anthologies.
  Carl Leggo
The Agnostic’s Prayer
Twelve Rifts for a Guitar With No Strings
Poetry

Carl Leggo is a poet and professor at the University of British Columbia where he teaches courses in English Education, writing, and narrative research. His poetry and fiction and scholarly essays have been published in many journals in North America and around the world. He is the author of three collections of poems: Growing Up Perpendicular on the Side of a Hill, View from My Mother’s House, and Come-By-Chance, as well as a book about reading and teaching poetry: Teaching to Wonder: Responding to Poetry in the Secondary Classroom. Also, he is a co-editor of Being with A/r/tography.
  Marsha L. Mentzer
Choosing the Casket Flowers
Poetry

Marsha Mentzer is a relatively new poet in a relatively old body.  She has taught English at Carlisle High School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania for 30 years and still lives to tell about it.  She began writing seriously three years ago after a poetry workshop in Massachusetts, and her Carlisle writing group offers continued encouragement.  Her inspiration comes from her husband’s thoughtful reflections, her son’s sardonic wit, and her daughter’s poetic sermons.  She has had poems published in Main Channel Voices, Out of Line, and Ruminate.
  Karen Miedrich-Luo
The World I Breathe
Creative Nonfiction

Karen is a writer and language coach who lives in Plano, Texas.  She has a BA in Religion and Philosophy from the University of Georgia and a post-graduate English Lit degree from the University of Houston.  She was a staff writer for Vision Magazine 2002-2005. She also spent three years teaching English, Writing, and History at Wuhan University in China where she met and married her husband, Brad. They have two daughters.
  Brad Molder
Fondling Will Not Be Permitted During The Worship Service
Fiction

Brad has worked as a park ranger, a seventh grade math teacher, and instructor of composition and literature.  He grew up in a town where mental patients wandered the streets.  Also, this is his first publication, and he wishes to thank his family and friends for their support. 
  Julie L. Moore
Sighting
Of Apples And Amnesia
On The Ground In Ohio
Poetry

Julie L. Moore’s book, Slipping Out of Bloom, was selected as a finalist for Carnegie Mellon University Press’s Poetry Series in 2007, and her chapbook, Election Day, was published by Finishing Line Press in 2006. Her poetry has also appeared or is forthcoming in Alaska Quarterly Review, Apple Valley Review, Blueline, The Christian Science Monitor, Flint Hills Review, The Fourth River, The MacGuffin, Sou’Wester, The Sow’s Ear Poetry Review, Valparaiso Poetry Review, Willow Review, and many others. An assistant fiction editor for The Antioch Review, Moore lives in Cedarville, Ohio where she directs the Writing Center at Cedarville University.
 Rick Mullin
Aquinas Flinched
Poetry

Rick Mullin is a journalist and painter whose poetry has been published in several print an online journals including The New Formalist, Relief, Shit Creek Review, Contemporary Sonnet, and The Umbrella. His poem “Shrine to Satan” has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize by Shit Creek Review. He lives in Northern New Jersey.
  Heidi Gabrielle Nobles
Visible Invisible
Creative Nonfiction

Heidi Gabrielle Nobles earned her Master’s degree in English Literature from Baylor University, where she wrote her thesis on the American Book of Common Prayer’s Rite II as a literary art form. She is currently at the University of South Carolina, where she studies and teaches writing, and she is working on a book about the way writing shapes world religions and individual spirituality.
  Christopher Nye
Hitched Together
Poetry

Christopher Nye lives in western Massachusetts and works for Orion Magazine. Previously he was a professor and college administrator. His poetry has appeared in Snowy Egret, Orbis, Kentucky Poetry Review, Pegasus, Berkshire Review, the online journal Lunarosity, and elsewhere, including anthologies. His recent children's picture book, The Old Shepherd's Tale, uses the Christmas story to bring a fresh perspective to the treatment of farm animals.
 

Steven Ostrowski
Mercy
Poetry

Steven Ostrowski lives with his wife and three children in Niantic, CT. He teaches at Central Connecticut State University. In 2006, Bright Hill Press published his chapbook, called In Late Fields. He is currently finishing a novel called The Highway of Spirit and Bone and a book of poems called Birds, Boys, God.
  Jendi Reiter
Bride of Christ
Fiction

Jendi Reiter’s first book, A Talent for Sadness, was published in 2003 by Turning Point Books. Her work has appeared in Poetry, The New Criterion, Mudfish, The Sow’s Ear Poetry Review, Clackamas Literary Review, Alligator Juniper, MARGIE: The American Journal of Poetry, Best American Poetry 1990 and many other publications. She is the editor of Poetry Contest Insider, an online guide to over 750 literary contests, published by www.winningwriters.com . “Bride of Christ” is an excerpt from her novel-in-progress.
  Luke C. Schlueter
Wanting Certain Things
Poetry

I don’t stare at ceilings as much as I used to since beginning teaching a few English classes each semester at Kent State  University on top of my full-time job as Creative Director for the Institute of Reading Development.  I fall like a stone into depths when I put my weary head down.  Which isn’t to say I don’t surface for air when one of the three kids calls out at 3 a.m. (although usually my wife attends). Sometimes I think this patchwork existence is too much.  At other times it truly feels like “Life’s Rich Pageant.”  I’ve had other poems published in various small journals.  I’m happy to have this one one published by Relief.
  Michael Schmeltzer
Milk
Poetry

Michael Schmeltzer grew up in Yokosuka, Japan before moving to the Mid-West. After finishing his undergraduate degree in St. Paul, Minnesota, he moved to Seattle in order to pursue a graduate degree. He now holds a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing from the Rainier Writing Workshop at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington. He has been published or has work forthcoming in Water~Stone Review, Sylvan Echo, and Hawaii Pacific Review.
 
Marian Kaplun Shapiro
After Holy War
Eight Shaker Trees, Six Shaker Graves
Poetry

Marian Kaplun Shapiro practices as a psychologist and poet in Lexington, Massachusetts. She is the author of a professional book, Second Childhood (Norton, 1988),  a poetry book, Players In The Dream, Dreamers In The Play (Plain View Press, 2007) and  two chapbooks: Your Third Wish, (Finishing Line, 2007); and The End Of The World, Announced On Wednesday (Pudding House, 2007). A Quaker, she counts her husband, two children, and five grandchildren her greatest blessings.
  Michael Shay
Baggage
Fiction

Michael Shay’s fiction and essays have been published in Northern Lights, High Plains Literary Review, Colorado Review, Owen Wister Review, Visions, High Plains Register, and In Short, a Norton anthology of brief creative nonfiction. His book of short fiction, “The Weight of a Body,” was published by Ghost Road Press in 2006. He was co-editor of the 2003 anthology, “Deep West: A Literary Tour of Wyoming.” A Colorado native, Michael has an MFA. in Creative Writing from Colorado State University and a BA in English from the University of Florida. He and his family live in Cheyenne, Wyoming.
  Jessica P. Shelenberger
Apple Bread
Blue Journeys
Creative Nonfiction

Jessica P. Shelenberger started her writing career as a city reporter for small dailies in Ohio and Pennsylvania, and during that time she earned Associated Press and Golden Quill awards. She is now seeking an MFA at Chatham University. A native of Bucyrus, Ohio, Jessica lives in New Wilimington, Pennsylvania, with her husband and son.
 Joanna Sit
Song of December
The Beauty of Men
What’s Left in the Beginning
Good Friday
Poetry

Joanna Sit has taught literature and creative writing at Brooklyn College, NYU and now teaches Composition at Medgar Evers College. Her work has appeared recently in Pegasus, Fickle Muses, Poem, and other literary journals. Her long poem, "Bitten by an Unusual fly," was included in the anthology Monologues From The Road, published by Heinemann Press in New Hampshire.
  Kate Strong
Icon
Editor’s Choice for Poetry

Kate is an unabashed sentimentalist prone to flights of fancy borne on the back of a rampant imagination.  She has been featured in such publications as Dog Horn Publishing, Polluto, and Languageandculture.net.  She can be found at her burrow in Wenham, Massachusetts, contemplating the life of her favorite saint, Francis of Assisi, and somehow managing to find time to study for an English Language and Literature major at Gordon College.
  Cayce D. Utley
Hagar
The Earnest Life
Poetry

Cayce D. Utley has a Master’s Degree in Government from Regent University and a Bachelor’s Degree in English from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.She lives and works in Falls Church, Virginia.Cayce is a true believer, a wife, a mother, an activist, and a writer. When she can take a breath, she blogs at http://inkedwell.wordpress.com
  Amy Wevodau
At The Graveside
Learning to Pray
Poetry
 
Amy Wevodau received her MA in Creative Writing in 2002 in the UK at Lancaster University.  She has been a classroom teacher, but resigned last year to give more time to her writing. This shift has brought unexpected adventures and she is currently working as an education consultant, freelance writer and tutor. She moved for a short time to Kansas City but found being so far away from an ocean more difficult than she expected.  She now resides in Denver and is currently contemplating a move back toward her native West Coast.  She has recently published poetry in Crux and Radix and she is still learning how to pray.




 

 
Authors for Issue 2.1! PDF Print E-mail
Written by Coach Culbertson   
Monday, 28 January 2008
Authors for Issue 2.1!

We are proud to announce our authors for Volume 2 Issue 1! Here they are in alphabetical order:

Kirsten Eve Beachy

The Institute of Transcendence

Fiction


Kirsten Beachy’s fiction and creative nonfiction pieces have appeared in Dreamseeker, eightyone, WriterAdvice, and The Tusculum Review. She received her MFA from West Virginia University and is a fledgling assistant professor of English at Eastern Mennonite University. She lives with her husband, a green-eyed cat, and a flock of pensioned laying hens on the Briery Branch of the North River in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley. Her latest accomplishments include hanging drywall, butchering broiler chickens, and having every room in the house clean at the same time.

Jenn Michelle Blair

Agreement

Note

Poetry


Jenn Blair is a PhD candidate at the University of Georgia. She is from Yakima, WA.

David Borofka

The Death of New Aurora

Fiction


David Borofka teaches composition, literature, and creative writing at Reedley College in Reedley, California. His stories have earned such awards as the Missouri Review’s Editors’ Prize and Carolina Quarterly’s Charles B. Wood Award for Distinguished Writing, and his collection, Hints of His Mortality, won the 1996 Iowa Short Fiction Award. His novel, The Island, was published by MacMurray & Beck, portions of which appeared in Gettysburg Review and Shenandoah. New work has recently appeared in Image, Southern Review, Glimmer Train, and Manoa.

Jeff E. Brooks-Harris

The Last Good Day

Creative Nonfiction


Jeff lives on the island of Oahu and works as a psychologist at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. He and his daughter Genevieve enjoy biking and traveling together. Jeff recently published a textbook entitled Integrative Multitheoretical Psychotherapy. This is his first published piece of creative nonfiction.

Jeremy Burgess

Eli Bison Becomes an Angel

Fiction


Jeremy is still an undergraduate student, but will be a graduate student later this year. He is currently a freelance journalist for The Birmingham News and Birmingham Weekly. Social talents include bad pick-up lines, clever remarks, and the ability to grow full facial hair at a young age. He has dreams of becoming a firefighter.

Maryann Corbett

Mid Evil

Subversive

Reading the Fire Code

Poetry


Maryann Corbett's poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in Measure, The Lyric, Alabama Literary Review, First Things, Rock and Sling, and other journals in print and online. Her chapbook Gardening in a Time of War was published in 2007 by Pudding House. She lives in St. Paul, Minnesota, and works as a legal-writing adviser, editor, and indexer for the Minnesota Legislature.


Barry L. Dunlap

Erosion

Poetry


Barry Dunlap loves ice cream, a good book and sports (in no particular order). He has worked as a teacher and coach, a campus minister, a church planter, and (currently) in educational support services. His work has been published in Spillway Review, Powhatan Review, Pebble Lake Review, Christianity and Literature, The Adirondack Review, as well as other journals. Barry earned his master's in English at Southeastern Louisiana University, where he studied under Tim Gautreaux. Barry lives in Walker, LA with his wife and four children—and their Chocolate Lab Coco.

Justin Whitmel Earley

Whisper New Orleans

Sometimes in Shanghai

Poetry


Bio Forthcoming

Chris Flowers

Man Nailed to Cross in Philippines

Poetry


Chris Flowers currently teaches English at The University of North Carolina at Charlotte and Central Piedmont Community College in Charlotte, NC. He enjoys spending Saturday afternoons at the movies with his wife Erica, and hopes to complete his first novel sometime in the next millenium. His poetry has recently appeared in Convergence.

Hannah E. Fries

Summer Burial

Poetry


Hannah grew up in New Hampshire and feels most at home when she is hiking the White Mountains, rain or shine. She graduated from Dartmouth College with a BA in English and a minor in music and is now on the editorial staff of Orion magazine in western Massachusetts. Her poems have been published in the Berkshire Review and other journals. She loves to sing (both in and out of the shower), cross-country ski, and climb trees, and has been known to dust off her French horn when the occasion calls for it.

John Keats

Arbor

Fiction


John Keats lives in Massachusetts. He received an MA in English from Boston College. His writing has appeared in Roux and Under the Sun.

Ross Kennerly

Little Proofs

Creative Nonfiction


Ross Kennerly is a contributing writer for The Real Chicago Magazine. His creative nonfiction has also appeared in The OffKILTer Review. He received his BA in French from Alma College, a liberal arts school in Alma, MI, where he was first encouraged by a friend to seriously pursue writing. He currently lives and works in Chicago, though he will always be rooted in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Yes, he is a Yooper.

Sally Rosen Kindred

Cardinal's Eve

Poetry


Sally Rosen Kindred's manuscript, Garnet Lanterns, won the 2005 Anabiosis Press Chapbook Competition, and she received a 2007 Individual Artist Award from the Maryland State Arts Council. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Blackbird, Poetry Northwest, The Florida Review, Ruminate, and Passages North. She lives in Columbia, Maryland, with her husband and sons.

Katherine Nicole Lee

John Chapter Twelve

Poetry


Katherine's craziest jobs have included painting monograms on saddles, acting as interim church janitor, and researching the genetic components of fruit fly gonads at Johns Hopkins University. Having mastered these crucial life skills, she is now seeking a theological education at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, California, where she lives with her husband, Rob.

Frederick Lord

Slumming with Lazarus

Commuting through the Rapture

Poetry


Frederick (Rick) is the Assistant Dean of Liberal Arts at Southern New Hampshire University, where he also teaches English and serves as poetry editor for Amoskeag, SNHU’s literary magazine. A finalist in 2007’s Dogwood Poetry Prize and honorable mention in the Juked Poetry Prize, Lord has recently appeared in Blueline, Switched-on Gutenberg, kaleidowhirl, Main Channel Voices, caesura, Bent Pin Quarterly, Relief and Bayou. He and his wife Heather, a painter, live in Bow, New Hampshire

Linda MacKillop

Dooms of Love

Editor’s Choice for Creative Nonfiction


Linda MacKillop lives in the charming town of Wheaton, Illinois with her husband Bill. On any given semi-warm evening, they can be found wandering the streets and parks of the downtown area, sipping coffee, or attending outdoor concerts. Together they have four sons. Linda’s work has been published in The MacGuffin, iParent, and The Philosophical Mother. Recently her work also appeared in two publications by Meredith Books: Along the Way and Along the Way for Teens. At the moment the ink is drying on her first novel, Try Again Farm.

Helen W. Mallon

Biology

Editor’s Choice for Fiction


Helen W. Mallon grew up in a Philadelphia Quaker family. She received her MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts in 2005. Her poetry chapbook, from Finishing Line Press, is titled Bone China. Her poems, essays and fiction have appeared in various publications, including the anthology Commonwealth: Contemporary Poets on Pennsylvania. Her story, Astral Projection is included in the 2007Best of Philadelphia Stories anthology. The working title of her novel is Quaker Playboy Leaves Legacy of Confusion.

Katie Manning

Intimacy

Poetry


Missing Bio

Michael Martin

It All Comes Down to Laundry

Poetry


Michael Martin lives on a small farm with his wife and seven children. His poetry and essays have appeared in many different magazines and journals, including Journal of Pre-Raphaelite Studies, Eclipse, and Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies, not to mention Relief. He teaches English at Marygrove College in Detroit, Michigan.

Maureen Doyle McQuerry

Conversation

Beyond

Poetry


Maureen is a poet and novelist, teacher and artist in the schools. She is the author of Wolfproof (Idylls 2006), first in a YA fantasy trilogy. The sequel, The Travelers' Market, will be out in July 2008. Recent poems can be found in The Southern Review, Journal of Mythic Arts, Goblin Fruit and the Georgetown Review.

Joyce Magnin Moccero

October's Orchid

Fiction


Joyce is writer, reader, mom, grandmom. She enjoys books, rpg video games, cross stitich, Humphrey Bogart movies, and loves to teach others about writing and reading when she can.

Rick Mullin

Catholic Worker

Poetry


Rick Mullin is a journalist and painter whose poetry has appeared in various print and online journals, including The New Formalist, Contemporary Sonnet, and the Shit Creek Review, which nominated his poem, Shrine to Satan for a Pushcart Prize. His work has been accepted for upcoming issues of Measure, Blue Unicorn, and Light Quarterly, and his first chapbook, Aquinas Flinched, is due to be published this spring by Modern Metrics, New York.

Hannah Faith Notess

Psalm 19

A Wreck

The Disaster Tourist

Single-Point Perspective

Poetry


Hannah Faith Notess is working on her MFA in Creative Writing at Indiana University. She is also editing a collection of personal essays about growing up female and evangelical. Her poems have recently appeared in Slate, Crab Orchard Review, and Rattle and are forthcoming in Image and 5AM

Brian G. Phipps

Miscarriages

Winter Solstice

Poetry


Brian G. Phipps holds a BA in English with an emphasis in creative writing from Western Michigan University, where he also studied music composition, and he has published poetry and other writing in Re:generation Quarterly and poetry in Mars Hill Review, Rock and Sling, and The Handmaiden. He works as an editor for a book publishing company in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where he lives with his wife and five kids. In addition to writing poetry, his interests include playing ice hockey and serving as a chanter in his Greek Orthodox parish.

J. Stephen Rhodes

Look Up

Creative Nonfiction


Before taking up writing full-time, J. Stephen Rhodes served as the academic dean of Memphis Theological Seminary and as a Presbyterian pastor. His poetry has appeared in Shenandoah, Tar River Poetry, The William and Mary Review, and The International Poetry Review, among others. His essays have appeared in Gettysburg Review, Brevity, Snowy Egret, and The Christian Century. He is currently working on a book dealing with the relationship between service and self-care and is seeking publication of his first book of poetry. He lives with his wife, Ann, on a farm in south central Kentucky.

Meg Sefton

Deborah

Fiction


Meg Sefton is a low residency MFA student at Seattle Pacific University. She lives in Orlando, Florida with her husband, son and dog. When not writing, reading, or studying, she’s tending the house poorly, driving her kid around in her messy car, and baking and/or burning prepared meals. Occasionally, she breaks out for a trip across the ocean. Last year she and her clan went to London. She hopes to go to New Zealand soon. Her current favorite color is blue and she has been recently enjoying fabulist stories and fairy tales. She likes coffee in any form or concentration. The same goes for chocolate.

Allison Smythe

The Significance of Place

Creative Nonfiction


Allison Smythe runs a graphic design firm, Ars Graphica, in Rocheport, Missouri, where she lives and works with husband Wayne Leal, a sculptor, and their two daughters. Her work has or will appear in The Weight of Addition, an anthology of Texas Poetry, Packingtown Review, Cranky, Verse Daily, versal V, The Southern Review, MO Writing from the River, The Gettysburg Review, Relief, the 2007 Texas Poetry Calendar, thematthewshouseproject.com, RainTown Review, TimeSlice, Anderbo.com, Gulf Coast and other journals, anthologies, record albums, and the Voice. Please stop by allisonsmythe.com and say hello.

Meredith Stewart

Forgetting Grace

Poetry


Missing bio

Mario Susko

There and Here

The Other Side

What I Want to Say

The Color of Blood

Editor’s Choice for Poetry


Mario Susko, a witness and survivor of the war in Bosnia, came, in a sense, back to the US at the end of 1993. He received his MA and PhD from SUNY Stony Brook in the 1970s and has taught at the University of Sarajevo and Nassau Community College, where he is currently an Associate Professor in the English Department. He is the recipient of several awards, including the 1997 and 2006 Nassau Review Poetry Award, the 1998 Premio Internazionale di Poesia e Letteratura "Nuove Lettere" (Naples, Italy), and the 2000 Tin Ujevic Award for "Versus Exsul" for the best book of poems published in Croatia in 1999. Susko is the author of 25 books of poems. His recent work includes his selected poems 1982-2002 Reading Life and Death (Zagreb: Meandar, 2003) and the anthology of modern Jewish-American short stories A Declaration of Being (Zagreb: Meandar, 2006) which he co-edited with Myron Schwartzman and translated into Croatian.

 
Authors for Issue 4! PDF Print E-mail
Written by Coach Culbertson   
Tuesday, 02 October 2007

We are proud to announce the authors for Issue 4! We continue to bring you writing from widely published authors and newly discovered talent. Make sure to pre-order your copy of Issue at a special price! Issue 4 is currently scheduled to ship middle of September 2007. In the meantime, click on Read More to discover a little more about who you'll be reading in Issue 4!
Read more...
 
Authors for Issue 3! PDF Print E-mail
Written by Coach Culbertson   
Friday, 20 April 2007


Once again, here we are- announcing another amazing group of authors for Issue 3! Also included in Issue 3 is the winner of the Faith*In*Fiction/Relief Daily Sacrament Contest, Don Hoesel, and the runner-up, Angie Poole The only way to read the winning entry is to order Issue 3! Order now at the lower Pre-Sales price!

And now, let us introduce you to the talented writers you'll be reading in Issue 3!
Read more...
 
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