Matthew Wimberley grew up in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Her writing has appeared in The Rumpus, Popshot Quarterly, Tahoma Literary Review, and other publications. She’s a doctoral student in Depth Psychology at Pacifica Graduate Institute. in fiction writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts. from Antioch University Los Angeles and an M.F.A. She lives in Baltimore and can be reached at The Dark Pages: Updating Patterns of Rape in Fiction by Zoe Marzo Deutsch Foundation, and two Individual Artist Awards from the Maryland State Arts Council. She was also awarded the 2016 Mary Sawyers Baker Prize for her work as well as a Ruby Award from the Robert W. Her debut story collection, My Life as a Mermaid, won the Dzanc Books Short Story Collection Competition. Jen Grow’s work has appeared in The Writer’s Chronicle, About Place Journal, The Sun Magazine, The GSU Review, Hunger Mountain, Indiana Review and many others. The Benefits of Not Knowing Your Audience by Jen Grow Currently, his academic and creative interests include indigeneity, disability studies, classical reception theory, and hybridity. Currently, he is pursuing an MA in Classics at the University of Georgia as a Beinecke Scholar and Osbourne Fellow. The Poet as God and Failure by Chris McCrackinĬhris McCrackin was born and raised on a small farm in Georgia and holds an undergraduate degree from Washington and Lee University in English and Classics. She is a Kundiman fellow, holds degrees from Whitworth University and the University of Miami, and is currently studying literature and religion at Yale Divinity School. Leah Silvieus is the author of three poetry collections, most recently, Arabilis (Sundress Publications 2019), and is the co-editor with Lee Herrick of The World I Leave You: An Anthology of Asian American Poets on Faith and Spirit (Orison Books 2020). ![]() An Interview with Leah Silvieus | by Hope Fischbach She lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where she is the Writing Coordinator at the Stamps School of Art and Design. Her audio poetry has been featured on the BBC Radio’s Short Cuts. Her poetry has appeared in Beloit, Rhino, Birdfeast, Gulf Coast, The Cream City Review and other journals. Jennifer Metsker’s poetry collection Hypergraphia and Other Failed Attempts at Paradise was published by New Issues Press. This Is Not a Day at the Fair: On Poetry and PTSD by Jennifer Metsker Originally from New York, he lives in Los Angeles, California where he is currently a Provost Fellow at the University of Southern California, pursuing a PhD in Literature and Creative Writing. His poems have recently appeared in Southern Humanities Review, Quarterly West, and Nashville Review. ![]() James Ciano holds an MFA from New York University, and has received support from the Vermont Studio Center and The Community of Writers. “Where in the body do I begin”: Grass and Hunger in Layli Long Soldier’s Whereas by James Ciano Visit her website, for contact info and to read more of her work. Themes of ancestry, neurodiversity, and mysticism reoccur in her latest writings and workshops. She earned an Emmy Award as a writer/producer of documentary films, including This Island Earth and Wolf Nation, shown on PBS, Discovery, and The Disney Channel. ![]() As a science journalist, she’s written feature articles for Scientific American MIND, Psychology Today, Brain World, and Huffington Post. Her debut novel, Orchid Child, forthcoming from Between the Lines Publishing in June, 2023, is based on the three-generation family story she first told in her memoir, A Lethal Inheritance (Prometheus Books/2012). Victoria Costello is a writer and teacher of memoir and auto-fiction based in Ashland, Oregon. On Reality, Fiction and Neurodiversity by Victoria Costello He previously served as assistant fiction editor for Gulf Coast, and he is currently a PhD student at the University of Cincinnati, where he teaches and studies fiction. His stories and essays appear or are forthcoming in The Masters Review, CRAFT, The Maine Review, Portland Review, and elsewhere. Find him at and on Twitter Wristwatches and Miniature Clocks by Daniel Abiva Huntĭaniel Abiva Hunt is a writer from South Jersey. A recipient of the 2019 Lascaux Prize in Short Fiction, his writing can be found in Best Microfiction 20, Best Small Fiction 20, Monkeybicycle, and numerous litmags. He lives in Indiana where he currently is the Editor at Fractured Lit and Uncharted Magazine. Tommy Dean is the author of two flash fiction chapbooks Special Like the People on TV (Redbird Chapbooks, 2014) and Covenants (ELJ Editions, 2021), and a full flash collection, Hollows (Alternating Current Press 2022).
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