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Andrew Michael Roberts'
collections are something has to happen next (iowa, 2008), dear wild abandon
(poetry society of america, 2007), and give up (tarpaulin sky, 2006). He is a sagittarius
and a cyclist and loves a good local burrito. Home is the sunnyside neighborhood of portland, oregon.
Peter Davis'
book of poems is Hitler's Mustache and he edited Poet's Bookshelf: Contemporary Poets on Books that
Shaped their Art. He’s recently had poems in journals like Tarpaulin Sky, Tight, and Barrelhouse.
He has poems forthcoming in Jacket, Double Room, Sixth Finch, and No Tell Motel. He lives in Muncie,
Indiana and teaches at Ball State University.
Sampson Starkweather
is a co-founder of Birds, LLC, an independent poetry press. His most recent chapbook
is The Heart Is Green from So Much Waiting from Immaculate Disciples Press. Recent or forthcoming work can
be found at: La Petite Zine, Action Yes, Anti-, NOö, Pax Americana, No Tell Motel, RealPoetik and elsewhere.
Karyna McGlynn
is the author of I Have to Go Back to 1994 and Kill a Girl, winner of the 2008 Kathryn A.
Morton Prize in Poetry from Sarabande Books. Her chapbooks include Scorpionica (New Michigan Press, 2007),
Alabama Steve (Destructible Heart Press 2008), and Small Shrines (Cinematheque Press, 2010). She received
her MFA from the University of Michigan and currently teaches at Concordia University. Her work appears in
Fence, LIT, Denver Quarterly, Diode, Octopus, Columbia Poetry Review, Caketrain and Forklift, Ohio. She edits
L4: The Journal of the New American Epigram with Adam Theriault and spends most of her time in Austin, TX.
Chris DeWeese
is the author of Fireproof Swan (Factory Hollow Press, 2009). New poems are forthcoming in Action Yes!, Black Warrior Review, Boston Review, and FIELD.
Garth Graeper
is a librarian and an editor at Ugly Duckling Presse, an independent publisher in Brooklyn, NY.
His poems have appeared in Cannibal, Horseless Review, Word For/Word, Bird Dog, the tiny, and in other places online and in print.
Chris Salerno
lives in Raleigh, NC and co-curates the So and So Series/Editions/Magazine (www.soandso.org).
His second book, Minimum Heroic will be published in Jan 2010 by the Mississippi Review Poetry Series. His first, Whirligig, is out from Spuyten Duyvil.
Some poems will be coming in Boston Review, Denver Quarterly, and The Equalizer. He suffers from nostalgia disorder.
Kathleen Rooney
(http://kathleenrooney.com/) is a founding
editor of Rose Metal Press (http://rosemetalpress.com) and the author of Live Nude Girl: My Life as an Object. Her essay collection For You,
For You I Am Trilling These Songs (
http://www.amazon.com/You-Am-Trilling-These-Songs/dp/1582435456)has just been
released by Counterpoint.
Kate Dougherty's
e-chapbook We Trundle We Ignite is forthcoming from Scantily Clad Press. More poems are
published or forthcoming in The Carolina Quarterly; Cannibal; Action, Yes; Columbia Poetry Review; and Court
Green. Kate holds an M.F.A. from Columbia College Chicago, where she currently teaches writing courses.
Rebecca Farivar
holds an MFA in poetry from St. Mary's College of California. She published poems under her maiden name,
Rebecca Guyon, in Denver Quarterly, 6x6, Octopus, Parcel, cold-drill, Strange Machine, and else- where.
Her chapbook American Lit is forthcoming from Dancing Girl Press.
John Cotter's
first novel, Under the Small Lights, will be published later this year by Miami University Press. He lives in Boston, where he edits Open Letters Monthly.
Claire Donato
(somanytumbleweeds.com)
lives in Brooklyn, NY. Recent poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Black Warrior Review,
Boston Review, Holly White (U.K.), Action Yes, and Lit. She is the author of a chapbook,
Someone Else's Body (Cannibal Books 2009), and is a second-year MFA Literary Arts candidate at Brown University.
Luke Bloomfield
is a co-editor for notnostrums and a Juniper
Fellow at UMass Amherst. He has poems recently published in Glitterpony, Invisible Ear and other places.
He is an out of work translator. He has read for 55 seconds at the Minutes Reading Series. He is a member of
the Western Massachusetts Robert Walser Society.
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