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2007 Fall

Fall 2007

Artwork

The Myth of Talos,Unable to See Over the Hegemony,Self Portrait as Hare,Construction/Deconstruction Mask,Icarus Chair, &Apparatus for Unrequitednessteaches Design in Materials and Woodworking at the ϳԹ. He received his M.F.A. in sculpture from UMass Dartmouth in 1998. His work, consisting mainly of large, toy-like, kinetic, interactive sculptures made mostly of wood, has been exhibited in over 150 museums and galleries. Millard-Mendez has received numerous awards, and his sculptures are held in over forty private and public collections.

Altar Piece I,Geo’s Bride,The Fatalist,GestationTracy Robbcurrently teaches at Ivy Tech Community College in Evansville, Indiana. Her specialties include digital montage and alternative processes in photography. She holds an M.F.A. in photography from Savannah College of Art and Design. Robb's work has been exhibited internationally and featured in many national publications includingCamera ArtsԻPhotographers Forum Magazine. She resides in Evansville with her daughter, Sophia.

Poetry

“[Both Have Died on Me]ŨĔB.J. Bestholds an M.F.A. from Washington University in St. Louis. His work has appeared in numerous journals, and most recently inThe Cream City Review,Permafrost, andNimrod. His long poemCrapisavailable as a chapbook from Centennial Press. He teaches at Carroll College in Wisconsin.

Mitla” & “Musica of LoveŨĔD.E. Zuccone, a graduate of Xavier University and the Vermont College M.F.A. program, works as an English and reading teacher in Houston. He has work appearing inBorderlands: Texas Poetry Review,The Hurricane Review, International Poetry Review,Lullwater Review,South Carolina Review, and Water~Stone.

“Cooling Into SteelŨĔTonya Northenor an English instructor at Owensboro Community and Technical College. She holds an M.F.A. from the University of Memphis, and her poetry has been published in various literary journals including CalyxԻCider Press Review. She lives on a fifth-generation family farm near Owensboro, KY.

“What Enters UsŨĔIrene McKinney the recipient of a NEA Fellowship in Poetry and a West Virginia Commission on the Arts Fellowship in Poetry. She is the author of four books of poetry:The Girl with a Stone in Her Lap,The Wasps at the Blue Hexagons,Quick Fire and Slow Fire, andSix O’clock Mine Report. She was appointed Poet Laureate of West Virginia in 1994. Her new book,Vivid Companion, is published by West Virginia University Press.

“Odysseus in AutumnŨĔ the author of four collections of poetry, the most recent of which isTwenty First Century Blues. He teaches at Indiana University Bloomington and in the Spalding University Brief Residency M.F.A. Program.

“CŨĔEva Hooker professor of English and writer-in-residence at Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame, Indiana.The Winter Keeper, a hand-bound chapbook (Chapiteau Press, 2000), was a finalist for the Minnesota Book Award in poetry in 2001. Her poems have recently appeared inThe Harvard Review,Water~Stone,Orion,Agnionline, andThe Notre Dame Review. She is a Sister of the Holy Cross.

“I Swear that Kid was all HeartŨĔJohn Calvin Hugheshas poems and stories forthcoming or published inMississippi Review,Snow Monkey,Apostrophe,Dead Mule,Word Riot, and others. Hughes is the author ofThe Novels and Short Storiesof Frederick Barthelme from the Edwin Mellen Press. He lives and works in Florida.

“French ProfessorŨĔGregory Fraserhas published poetry in theSouthern Review,The Paris Review, theChicago Review, and many other literary journals. A two-time finalist for the Walt Whitman Award, Fraser’s first book of poems,Strange ʾà, was published in 2003 by Texas Tech University Press. The recipient of a grant from the NEA, he teaches at the University of West Georgia, outside Atlanta.

“T Tempest” & “Emergency MedicineŨĔSeth Michelson’schapbook,Maestro of Brutal Splendor, is available from Jeanne Duval Editions, and he welcomes contact at sethmichelson@gmail.com.

“PǷɱŨĔNora Hutton Shepard a native of Raleigh, North Carolina. She graduated from Hollins University and recently earned an M.F.A. from North Carolina State University, where she presently teaches a creative writing class in poetry. She maintains a studio for her painting.

“False AttributionŨĔMelanie Jordan currently teaching at the University of West Georgia. She received her Ph.D. in creative writing and literature at the University of Houston, and her M.F.A. from Southern Illinois University–Carbondale. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming inIowa Review,Black Warrior Review,Southeast Review,Diagram,Poetry Southeast,Pebble Lake Review, and others.

“MdzٱŨĔJenny Kander, a resident of Bloomington, Indiana, for the past fourteen years, is convinced that in the beginning the Word was poetry. In addition to radio poetryprograms, she has edited two poetry collections and co-edited two more.Taboo, her first chapbook, waspublished by Finishing Line Press in 2004.

“Bٳ岹ŨĔBrent Fisk a writer from Bowling Green, Kentucky. He is a three-time Pushcart nominee whose work has appeared inRattle,Southern Poetry Review, andSoutheast Review. He is working on his first book,Accidental Body of Knowledge.

“Night SweatsŨĔSue Howell a former teacher of literature and writing. She received her M.A. from Tulane University and her Ph.D. from Southern Illinois University. She lives in Carbondale, Illinois, where she is working on a series of Florida poems.

“Sacrifice,” “No Verges for the Next Two Miles,” & “T Work of RevelationŨĔ the author of nine books of poems, most recentlyHalf Lives: Petrarchan Poems,Unauthorized Autobiography: New and Selected Poems, andHeartwall. In 2000, he was awarded the Order of Freedom Medal for literary and humanitarian work in the Balkans, and he won his fifth Pushcart Prize in 2003. Jackson teaches at the University of Tennessee–Chattanooga and in the Vermont College low-residency M.F.A program.

Interview

“Revelation: An Interview with Richard JacksonŨĔContributing editorBrenda DeMartini’sstories and poems have appeared inConfrontation,Kansas Quarterly,Minnesota Review,Mississippi Mud, theSun, andThree Rivers Poetry Journal.

Fiction

“Grain ChuteŨĔKate Gale the managing editor of Red Hen Press, the president of the American Composers Forum Los Angeles, and the editor ofThe Los Angeles Review. Her latest work isMating Seasonfrom Tupelo Press and librettosRio de Sangrewith Don Davis, Disney Hall, 2005 andParadise Lostwith Stephen Taylor, VOX, New York City Opera, 2006. Gale has published five collections of poetry; an autobiographical novel,Lake of Fire; and a bilingual children’s book.

“Close RangeŨĔMary Feuer the executive story editor of the television series Dante's Cove, which has been described asDark ShadowsmeetsThe O.C. meets Queer As Folk, if you can imagine that. She is currently developing her original pilotGod and Mannfor Maverick TV. Feuer’s short story “House on Fire” won the 2006 Writer’s Digest Annual Awards Grand Prize. She supports her fiction habit by rewriting feature films that usually don’t get made.

“Live GirlsŨĔPaul Michelhas lived in Seattle for twenty-five years. He is a graduate of Kenyon College and of the Warren Wilson M.F.A. Program for Writers. His work has appeared inGlimmer Train, theRed Rock Review,Short Story Journal, theRockhurst Review,Rosebud, and other journals. His first novel,Houdini Pie, is under representation by Barbara Braun Associates, Inc. of New York. Along with being a writer of fiction, Michel is also a songwriter, singer, and fiddle player.

“Miss Brighton Beach, 1937ŨĔMeryl Peters, a resident of Santa Barbara, California, has never lived in Brooklyn, New York. “Miss Brighton Beach, 1937” is an excerpt from her novel,The First One to Speak Loses. Peters has an M.F.A. from Antioch University, was the runner up for the 1999 Cottonwood Art Cooperative Fiction Fellowship, and was also a 1999 AWP Writers’ Conferences & Festivals scholarship finalist.

Nonfiction

“T PasagewayŨĔDouglas C. Wilson, who retired in 2002, lives in Amherst, Massachusetts, where for twenty-seven years he was a publications director and editor at Amherst College, his alma mater. Before that he spent thirteen years as a reporter forThe Providence Journal—first in Rhode Island, and later as Washington correspondent. But as the son, grandson, and great-grandson of Hoosiers, he still regards Indiana as home.

“Gypsies, Duende, and Dualities in Frederico García Lorca’sPoem of the Deep SongŨĔMihaela Moscaliuc’sco-translations of Romanian poetry appear inArts & Letters,Connecticut Review,Mid-American Review,Mississippi Review, and elsewhere. Other publications include articles inSoundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal and History of the Literary Cultures in East-Central Europeand Interculturality and Translation; book reviews inTriQuarterly,Prairie Schooner,Georgia Review,Fugue, andPoetry International; and poems inGreat River Review,Near East Review,Crab Orchard Review,New Letters,The English Record, andMeridians.

Reviews

“Current AffairsŨĔLiam Callanan, author ofAll SaintsԻThe Cloud Atlas, coordinates the Ph.D. in creative writing program at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee.

“Lyrical BrillianceŨĔPamela Garveyhas published poetry in many literary journals includingThe North American Review,Sonora Review,The Spoon River Poetry Review, andPleiades. Her chapbook entitledFear forthcoming from Finishing Line Press. She is an assistant professor of English at St. Louis Community College–Meramec.

“T Comfort of Cruelty: Liam Rector’sThe Executive Director of the Fallen WorldŨĔEric Nortonlives in State College, Pennsylvania, where he is pursuing a Ph.D. in American literature at Penn State University.

“Sensual TranscendenceŨĔL.J. Farrell a Ph.D. candidate in Irish Studies at Southern Illinois University.

“That Kind of PeopleŨĔJeffrey Thomson’sCelestial Emporium of Benevolent Knowledge, a chapbook based on the mythical Chinese encyclopedia, was published by RopeWalk Press in 2006; his third book of poems,Renovation, was part of the Carnegie Mellon University Press poetry series in 2005; and his second,The Country of Lost Sons, was published by Parlor Press at Purdue University in February 2004. His first book,The Halo Brace, was brought out by Birch Brook Press in 1998. He was awarded a 2005 Literature Fellowship in Poetry from the National Endowment for the Arts and a 2006 Pennsylvania Council for the Arts Individual Artists Fellowship. Thomson is currently an assistant professor of creative writing in the B.F.A. program at the University of Maine Farmington.

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