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Brent Calderwood's poetry has previously appeared in The Chabot Review, modern words,
and Through Our Eyes. His essays and reviews have been published widely, including the
January 2008 issues of The Gay & Lesbian Review and Lambda Book Report. He received a
2007 Lambda Literary Foundation Fellowship for poetry, and was a 2007 Chancellor's Fellow
in English Literature at the CUNY Grad Center. |
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Pat Clifford is the author of several chapbooks including A story by fair: Rules for Radicals (2006)
and Ring of Honor (2007). Work has appeared in Boog City, Hundreds, Streetvibes and is
forthcoming in CyPress Magazine. A five-minute version of Asylum was performed at the
Naropa Summer Writing Program in 2007. He is the coordinator of a homeless shelter in Cincinnati, Ohio. |
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Deborah Poe's first book, a poetry collection from Our Parenthetical Ontology is forthcoming
from Custom Words (fall). Many of her elements have been published or are forthcoming in
MiPOesias, Denver Quarterly, Many Mountains Moving, Copper-Nickel, and Flim Forum's A Sing Economy.
Her current project is a short fiction collection, Event Landmarks. |
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Ed Schenk lives and works in Amsterdam. In his work, he expresses his very own perception
of "visible language of a culture". Most recent publications of work in Otholiths (2007,
visual poetry), Mus¨Ĥe de l'Elys¨Ĥe (2007, photography), Caught in the Act of Jazz
(2007, photography). |
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Cralan Kelder's recent publications include French Pastry (Coracle 2007) City Boy
(Longhouse 2007). More of his poetry may be seen online in Origin magazine, a journal
he "highly recommends as a way to spend some time on the internet".
He is a resident of Amsterdam. |
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Tim Martin works in theatre and lives in the Philadelphia, PA area. He attended the
Naropa University. Tim's work has been seen and heard in: I-Outlaw, EOAGH, Altered Books
Project, Poetry Sz, One Less magazine, Big Bridge, Hamilton Stone Review, and many others.
Some of his plays have recently been seen in Philly: Echo, The Ballad of Joe Hill,
Tales From Turtle Isle and and several adaptations of children's stories. |
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