![]() James Brubaker is the author of two books Liner Notes and Pilot Season. She is a Hedgebrook Alumna and holds a BA in Theatre from the University of Alaska, Anchorage. She is the winner of the Edward Albee Playlab Award, presented by Edward Albee, for her play, The Day Maggie Blew Off Her Head. Her play, “Women of the Holocaust,” was published by the Kennedy Center in their Volume I anthology of Best Student One-Acts. She is the recipient of the San Francisco Writers Conference First Prize Award for Fiction. Her stories have appeared in The Sonora Review, The San Francisco Chronicle (twice), Scholastic Books, Seventeen Magazine, Blue Penny Quarterly, Story Magazine, On the Page, Big Ugly Review, The Quotable, Prime Number, Bareback Lit, Tattoo Highway, Red Fez, Cossack Review, Citron Review, Extract(s), Drafthorse, Solstice, ROAR, Spry, Literary Orphans and other literary journals.Īmy Bridges is a television writer whose work has appeared on Discovery Health, TLC, and HGTV. ![]() The Chicago Humanities for the Arts presented one of her stories in their Stories on Stage. Marion de Booy Wentzien was a recipient of the PEN Syndicated Fiction Award (twice) and The New Letters Literary Award. ![]() Her stories have appeared in various journals and anthologies including Shenandoah, the North American Review, the Bellingham Review, the Indiana Review, and Best American Non-Required Reading. Nora Bonner writes and teaches in Atlanta, Georgia, where she is a PhD student in fiction at Georgia State. She’s been featured on Poetry Daily and Verse Daily, and is an assistant professor of creative writing at Georgia Southern University. Her work has appeared in such journals as The Rumpus, Prairie Schooner, Conduit, the Indiana Review, the Greensboro Review, Feminist Studies, and Copper Nickel. She is also the author of four chapbooks of poetry and one of nonfiction. Born in Boston, she graduated from Harvard in 1991 and lives in Los Angeles.Įmma Bolden is the author of Malificae (GenPop Books, 2013), and medi(t)ations, forthcoming from Noctuary Press. Her work has appeared in The Kenyon Review, The Antioch Review, Narrative Magazine, and many others, and has been shortlisted for The Best American Short Stories and won the Arts & Letters prize. Her short story collection (I Knew You’d Be Lovely, Broadway, 2011) was chosen for the Barnes & Noble Discover program. Bernard’s fiction has appeared or is forthcoming in journals including Glimmer Train, LIT, Cutbank, Gigantic, Front Porch, and Quarterly West, among others.Īlethea Black’s recent memoir (You’ve Been So Lucky Already, Little A, 2018) was reviewed by The New York Times. Bernard’s first novel, Studies in the Hereafter, is forthcoming from Red Hen Press, and his collection Desert Sonorous won the 2014 Juniper Prize and is forthcoming from UMass Press. He directs the creative writing program at the University of La Verne, where he also edits Prism Review. Sean Bernard holds degrees from Arizona, Oregon State, and the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. His poems have appeared in Cleaver, The Southern Review, Crazyhorse , and Shenandoah among others. Hillbilly Guilt, his latest, won the Hidden River Arts / Willow Run Poetry Book Award and will appear next year. He is the recipient of a Creative Writing Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts and fellowships from the Florida Division of Cultural Affairs and the Ohio Arts Council. Roy Bentley, a finalist for the Miller Williams prize for Walking with Eve in the Loved City, has published eight books including American Loneliness from Lost Horse Press, who is bringing out a new & selected. Her sixth album, I Get A Kick: Cole Porter Reimagined, will be out in January 2018 on the Jazzed Media label. Lisa is also a jazz and neo-soul singer-songwriter-poet. She won creative writing grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and others. Her poems have appeared in more than 60 anthologies and periodicals, including The Kenyon Review, Tikkun, Ploughshares, Lilith, Brilliant Corners, Field, and City Lights Review. Lisa B (Lisa Bernstein) is the author of the poetry book The Transparent Body (Wesleyan University Press) and the chapbook Anorexia (Five Fingers Poetry). Appel has received the William-Faulkner-William Wisdom Award for best short story and a Sherwood Anderson Foundation grant. He teaches at the Gotham Writers’ Workshop and practices medicine in New York City. His fiction has appeared in AGNI, The Alaska Quarterly Review, The Gettysburg Review, The Missouri Review, and elsewhere. Appel’s books include the story collection Einstein’s Beach Home, as well as the essay collection, Phoning Home.
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