|
|
Poets D-KStephan Delbos “Picture This” Stephan Delbos is a New England-born poet who teaches at The Anglo-American College, Czech Republic. He edits The Prague Revue and moderates The Prague Poetry Workshop. His work has been featured most recently in The Small Press Review, The Dirty Napkin, Alehouse, and Bordercrossing Berlin. He lives in Prague. Peter Desy
“The Dreamers” Peter Desy is a former faculty member of Ohio University’s Department of English. His poems have appeared in Shenandoah, Poetry East, The Virginia Quarterly Review, The Greensboro Review, other journals, and a poetry collection, Driving from Columbus, as well as two chapbooks. He lives in Ocala, Florida. Richard Downing
“Prone” Richard Downing earned his Ph.D. (English) from the University of South Florida. He is the co-founder of Save Our Naturecoast and the Florida Peace Action Network. He has won the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s Barbara Mandigo Kelly Peace Poetry Award and the Matt Clark Poetry Prize. He has also received poetry awards from Juked, Knockout Literary Magazine, and Prose Ax. He lives in Hudson, Florida. Ellen Kirvin Dudis
“Vanishing Act” Ellen Kirvin Dudis has been writing poems for decades. Her work has appeared in various journals and reviews, including The National Poetry Review, The Christian Science Monitor, Cream City Review, Baltimore Sun, and California Quarterly. She lives in Pocomoke City, Maryland. John Flynn
“Lady Terrorist Slays Lady Soldier” “And Herself” John Flynn has published several chapbooks of poetry. His most recent chapbook is entitled Wave And Metronome (Pudding House Publishers). His poems have earned him awards from the New England Poetry Club and the U.S. Peace Corps. He lives in Charlottesville, Virginia. “John Rabe’s Lilacs”
Joe Hall is the founder of the Washington, D.C., area reading series Cheryl’s Gone. A 2007-2008 George Mason Thesis Fellow, his first book, Pigafetta Is My Wife, is forthcoming (2010) through Black Ocean Press. He lives in West Lafayette, Indiana. Colleen S. Harris
“Tysketöser” Colleen S. Harris is a member of the library faculty at North Carolina State University. Her poetry has appeared in Wisconsin Review, Sow’s Ear Poetry Review, descant, Free Verse, Main Street Rag, Adirondack Review, and Appalachian Heritage. Her first book of poetry, God in my Throat, will be published by Bellowing Ark Press in 2009. She is currently pursuing an M.F.A. in Creative Writing at Spalding University. She lives in Chattanooga, Tennessee. “M.A.S.H.”
Paul Hellweg writes reference books, fiction, and poetry. He views poetry as a “lost art,” in the sense that it was “lost to him.” He lives in Frazier Park, California. Jean Hollander
“The Crisis” Jean Hollander is a poet and translator whose first book of poems, Crushed into Honey, was published as winner of the Eileen W. Barnes Award. Another collection of her poetry, Moondog, was a winner in the QRL Poetry Book Series. Her most recent poetry book is Organs and Blood (2008). Hollander’s work has appeared in hundreds of magazines and anthologies. The City of Florence awarded her the Gold Medal for Dante Translation in 2008. She lives in Hopewell, New Jersey. “Tinian Island, 1944: the B-29 base”
Charles Hood has written five books of poetry. His sixth book, Bombing Ploesti, was released by Red Hen Press. He has been a Fulbright Scholar, a ski instructor, and a bird guide in Africa. He teaches creative writing and remedial English at Antelope Valley College. He lives in Lancaster, California. “Schoolgirl”
“Listening” Fady Joudah is a Palestinian physician and active member of Doctors Without Borders, where he served in Darfur. He is the author of The Earth in the Attic, which won the 2007 Yale Younger Poets Award, and is translator of The Butterfly’s Burden, poems by the late Mahmoud Darwish, which was a finalist for the 2008 PEN Award for Poetry in Translation. He lives in Houston, Texas. Daniel Kelty
“Prelude to War—Serbia” Dan Kelty is a high school Spanish teacher who has written poetry for 15 years, but only began submitting work for publication in 2006. His poetry has been published in Nimrod and MARGIE. He lives in St. Louis, Missouri. Lidia Kosk
“until” “what the morning brings” Lidia Kosk is a Polish attorney and author of six books of poems and short stories. Her poems have been published in journals and anthologies, and broadcast in a weekly program of Polish Radio. English translations of her poems have appeared in International Poetry Review, Passager, September Eleven: Maryland Voices Anthology, Contemporary Writers of Poland, and the Loch Raven Review. Her first bilingual book of poems, niedosyt/reshapings, was published in 2003. She lives in Poland. “Still Life with Running Figure” “The Sepoy Rebellion” Andrew Kozma received his M.F.A. from the University of Florida and his Ph.D. in English Literature and Creative Writing from the University of Houston. His poems have appeared in Subtropics, Zoland Poetry, Smartish Pace, Dislocate, and AGNI On-line, and his non-fiction has appeared in The Iowa Review. His first book of poems, City of Regret (2007), won the Zone 3 First Book Award. He lives in Houston, Texas. |
|