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nin andrews is the author of several books, including The Book of Orgasms, Why They Grow Wings, and Midlife Crisis with Dick and Jane. Her most recent works are the book Sleeping with Houdini, published by BOA Editions in 2007, and the chapbook Dear Professor, Do You Live in a Vacuum, published the same year by Subito Press. Her next book, Southern Comfort, is forthcoming from CavanKerry Press.
Dan Archer is a comix journalist specializing in visual nonfiction and reportage. He has
created comics to raise awareness about the corporate exploitation of migrant workers, the industrialization of the farming industry,
and the tourist trade in Cuba. He is currently working on translating the
stories of undocumented migrant workers in the U.S. into comics format for his
MFA thesis in cartooning at the Center for Cartoon Studies, as well as
publishing work to his site
www.archcomix.com twice a week. He is a regular contributor to Bash Magazine in Washington and The Other Side in the UK, and has had work published by Penguin Books, Atlantic, and Harper Collins.
Anemone Beaulier has published poems in roger and cream city review, and she has others forthcoming in Eclipse and Santa Clara Review. She lives in Macon, Georgia, and completed her MFA in Creative Writing at
Georgia College & State University in 2007.
James Warren Boyd grew up in Orange County, California, and received his BA in History from UCLA.
After serving with the Peace Corps in Poland, he returned to San Francisco and
received his MA in Literature from San Francisco State University, where he
currently teaches and coordinates a writing center.
Peer Brockhoefer has worked as an editor and photographer for newspapers, magazines and agencies
in Germany for nearly fifteen years, ever since he graduated from school at age
twenty-one. Photography becomes ever more important to his work, because it
takes him to more exciting places than his writing does. He likes photographing
crowded places, demonstrations and public events because people lose their
usual appearances, revealing their truths.
Veronica Chater has narrated her stories on This American Life and published dozens of stories and essays in such places as the Los Angeles Times Magazine, the San Francisco Chronicle, and the Guardian UK, as well as in various literary journals and anthologies. Her memoir, entitled Waiting for the Apocalypse (called “unsparingly honest” by Kirkus, and “powerful” by Publisher’s Weekly) was released on February 2, 2009. She is currently at work on a second memoir.
Avery Colt lives on Nantucket Island, Massachusetts and writes primarily short fiction and
poetry. His most recent work has appeared in Passages and Slant.
Angela Coppola is a filmmaker and educator from New York residing in Oakland, CA. Her film, The Good Ship Impossible, is part of the Miss Rockaway Armada installation currently at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art. She is
working toward her California teaching credential and putting together her
third film. Her work can be found at www.angelacoppola.org.
Genie Cotner, a cancer survivor, lives with her husband and daughter in Charlotte, North
Carolina. She was the 2007 winner of the Deane Ritch Lomax Poetry Contest. Her
poems have appeared in Iodine Poetry Journal, Main Street Rag, Kakalak: Anthology of Carolina Poets, After Shocks: The Poetry of Recovery for Life-Shattering Events, and other publications.
Steve Crane is an amateur photographer from Cape Town, South Africa. He is a computer programmer by profession and enjoys photography as relaxation and a way to spend time outdoors. You can view his photographs at www.flickr.com/photos/strandloper and his infrequently updated blog at craniac.net.
Brian Cronwall teaches English at Kaua’i Community College in Hawai’i. His poetry has been published in journals and anthologies in Hawai’i, Guam, the mainland United States, Australia, Japan, the United Kingdom, and
France.
Teresa Chuc Dowell is a writer of poetry and short stories. She has a BA in Philosophy and teaches
English literature at a Los Angeles public high school. Her poems have appeared
or are forthcoming in various print and online magazines, including The National Poetry Review, Community Life Magazine, Jack Magazine, PoetryMagazine.com, miller’s pond online, and www.sugarmule.com. She also wrote and published a children’s book called Bye Bye, Grandma in 2007.
Ralph Dranow published a poetry book, Sunday Ritual, about his experience working in bookstores which won first prize in the 2000 Nerve Cowboy Chapbook Contest. His poems and articles have been widely published. He’s a freelance writer and editor who lives in Oakland, California with his wife, Naomi Rose, who is a writer, musician, visual artist and book developer.
Renee Emerson graduated from Union University in May and is currently working on her MFA in
poetry at Boston University. Her work has previously appeared in Tar River Poetry, Keyhole Publications, Sojourn, and Ruminate, among others. She lives in the suburbs of Boston with her husband, and they
dread their upcoming first winter outside of the South.
Muriel Fish earned her MFA in creative writing from Goddard College, and her poems and
essays have been published in journals and anthologies. She teaches writing
courses at Thomas College in Waterville, Maine, and is completing a memoir, Sing Me a Lullaby, about her experiences as a teenage mom in the seventies.
Ray Fudge has been living in the nation’s capital for the past thirty-three years, and like most folks there, he works for his “uncle.” Photography is his passion and he enjoys documenting all the goings-on in his crazy/wonderful city.
Politically, he considers himself an independent progressive and he is equally
critical of foolishness on the left and the right.
Jeff Galasso is a London-based semi-professional photographer with two psychology degrees. He specializes in capturing and evoking emotion with his photography. His work can be seen at www.flickr.com/photos/jmgphotos
J. Malcolm Garcia has had work published in The Best American Travel Writing and The Best American Non-Required Reading.
Richard Gilbert ran a sheep farm for a decade in southern Ohio’s hill country and is writing a memoir of farming and Appalachia, from which “Remembering Paul” is adapted. His work has appeared in Orion, SNReview, and Farming: People, Land, Community. Gilbert, who earned an MFA in creative nonfiction at Goucher College, has
worked as a journalist and book publisher and teaches writing at Ohio
University. His blog on narrative nonfiction is at richardgilbert.wordpress.com
Deb Hall has been collecting, researching, photographing, writing about, and enjoying
Mexico and Mexican folk art for eighteen years. In 2008, her photo, “Red, White and Blue, Differently” was selected by Penguin Press to appear on the cover of The General in His Labyrinth on the occasion of the author’s 80th birthday. She is honored to have her photography associated with Gabriel
García Márquez in any context. Currently, Hall combines her photography and writing
skills on her Mexican culture blog, zocalodemexicanfolkart.blogspot.com and on www.zocalofolkart.com, the website of Zócalo Folk Arts—the folk art store she co-owns with her husband—under the heading “Postcards From Mexico.”
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