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Summer/Fall 1999
New Series · Volume XXI Number 3/4
Contents ·
Contributors ·
Editor's Notes & Cover Art |
| contributors |

Photo by Allen Ginsberg |
Antler, who hails from
Milwaukee, has had his work published in several anthologies: Atomic
Ghost: Poets Respond to the Nuclear Age; The Soul Unearthed: Celebrating
Wildness and Personal Renewal through Nature; Reclaiming the Heartland:
Lesbian and Gay Voices from the Midwest; and American Poets
Say Goodbye to the 20th Century. |
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David Baker is poetry
editor of The Kenyon Review. His most recent books are Meter
in English: A Critical Engagement (1996) and The Truth about
Small Towns (poems, 1998). Heresy and the Ideal: On Contemporary
Poetry is forthcoming. Baker teaches at Denison Univeristy. |
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Keith Banner lives and
works in Cincinnati, Ohio. His first novel, The Life I Lead,
was published this year by Alfred A. Knopf. |

Photo by Miriam Berkley |
Erin Belieu is the author
of Infanta (Copper Canyon, 1996), which was selected in the
National Poetry Series. Her second book, One Above and One Below,
is forthcoming from Copper Canyon in February of 2000. New poems have
appeared in Grand Street, TriQuarterly, and Boulevard. |
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Marvin Bell's recent
books are Ardor (Copper Canyon, 1977), Poetry for a Midsummer's
Night (Seventy Fourth Street Productions, 1998, Seattle, illustrated),
and Wednesday (Salmon Poetry, Ireland, 1998). |
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Beth Bosworth is the
author of A Burden of Earth (Hanging Loose Press, 1995).
She teaches English at St. Ann's School in Brooklyn, and is currently
working on a second collection of stories. |
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Derick Burleson has
received a 1999 creative writing fellowship from the National Endowment
for the Arts. He is completing a Ph.D. at the University of Houston
where he is managing editor of Gulf Coast. His poems are
forthcoming or have recently appeared in Paris Review, Poetry,
and Georgia Review. |
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John Chioles is a professor
of comparative literature at New York University. He has translated
twelve ancient Greek plays for the theater, and writes fiction. He
writes both in Greek and English, and divides his time between Athens
and New York. His latest two books are Aeschylus: Mythic Theatre,
Political Voice (University of Athens Publications, 1995) and
Theory of Literature (in Greek, Kastaniotis, 1996). |
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Robert Dana's has been
awarded two National Endowment Fellowships (1985 and 1993), the Delmore
Schwartz Memorial Award for Poetry (1989) and a Pushcart Prize (1996).
His most recent books include Hello, Stranger: Beach Poems
(Anhinga Press, 1996) and A Community of Writers: Paul Engle and
the Iowa Writers' Workshop (University of Iowa Press, 1999),
a gathering of memoirs of the first twenty-five years of America's
most famous writing program. |
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Maija Rhee Devine's
stories have appeared in Michigan Quarterly Review, ByLine,
and Dutiful Daughters, an anthology on the theme of mother/daughter
relationships, which is to be published by Seal Press. Awards include
the Doubleday Award in 1996 and a literary fellowship in 1998, both
from the Wyoming Arts Council. She is working on a book-length memoir,
Ten Times Better than a Boy. |
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Emil A. Draitser has
authored two collections of short stories in Russian. His work has
also appeared in International Quarterly, Confrontation, Midstream,
ELF, and elsewhere. A recipient of the New Jersey Council of
the Arts Fellowship in Fiction, he is a professor of Russian at Hunter
College in New York City. |

Photo by Ted Rosenberg |
Stephen Dunn is author
of eleven collections of poetry, the most recent of which is Riffs
& Reciprocities (Norton). His previous book, Loosestrife,
(Norton) was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. |
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Dinara Georgeoliani
was educated in Moscow and Tbilisi, Georgia, with a concentration
in comparative linguistics. She has published more than ten articles
in Russia on American film. She teaches foreign languages at Central
Washington University and collaborates with Mark Halperin on translations
from Russian/Soviet literature. |
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Robert Glasser has a
B.A. in history from Yale University and has studied Russian at Hunter
College and at the Russian Institute in New York. |
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Mark Halperin teaches
English at Central Washington University and has taught in Japan,
Estonia, and Russia, where he was also a Fulbright lecturer. His most
recent book of poetry is The Measure of Islands (Wesleyan).
With Dinara Georgeoliani he has published translations of Russian
and Soviet period writers Bunin, Galich, Kharms, and Platonov. |
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James Hatch, a poet
and playwright, is pursuing his Ph.D. in English at the City University
of New York. He has published in Partisan Review, Southwest Review,
Tennessee Review, and American Book Review. |

Photo by Rebecca Walk |
Mark Jarman's latest
collection of poetry, Questions for Ecclesiastes, was a finalist
for the 1997 National Book Critics Circle Award and won the 1998 Lenore
Marshall Poetry Prize. He teaches at Vanderbilt University. His next
collection, Unholy Sonnets, is due to be published by Story
Line Press in spring 2000. |
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Greek poet Constantine P. Kavafis
(1863-1933), born in Alexandria, Egypt, spent his adolescence in England
(with a short stay in Constantinople, the place of his family's origin),
and lived out his life in Alexandria as a civil servant. He printed
his poems privately for his friends, never offering them for publication
in his lifetime. Cavafy designated only 154 of his poems to stand
as his published corpus. |
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Daniel Kharms, now deceased,
wrote in the 1920s and 1930s in the then Soviet Union, but aside from
his children's verse, was not permitted to publish. A dozen or so
years ago translations of his work appeared in Russia's Unknown
Writers of the Absurd, by George Gibian. An updated version was
reissued as The Man in the Black Raincoat. Since then, more
works by Kharms have become available, and it is from these that Dinara
Georgeoliani and Mark Halperin have translated the prose pieces in
this issue. |
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Karl Kirchwey's books
of poems include The Engrafted Word (1998), Those I Guard
(1993), and A Wandering Island (1990, Norma Farber First
Book Award, Poetry Society of America). Recipient of a Rome Prize
in literature and of grants from the NEA and Guggenheim Foundation,
Kirchwey has been director of the Unterberg Poetry Center of the Ninety-second
Street Y in New York since 1987. |
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Sydney Lea's sixth book
of poems won the 1998 Poet's Prize. His 1989 novel, A Place in
the Mind, has been reissued in paper by Story Line. |
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Hubert H. McAlexander,
professor of English at the University of Georgia, is the editor of
two collections devoted to Peter Taylor. He is now writing Taylor's
biography, from which this essay is taken. |
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Mong-Lan is a visual
artist and writer. Her poems have been included in Watermark:
Vietnamese American Poetry and Prose (1998), Quarterly West
(Autumn/Winter 1998-99), and she has work forthcoming in Iowa
Review, Seneca Review, and Manoa. |
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V. Penelope Pelizzon
received a 1997 Nation/Discovery Award. Her poetry collection Nostos
won the Hollis Summers Poetry Prize and is due out in October from
Ohio University Press. Her essay on Philip Larkin and the Carnivalesque
is forthcoming this year in New Larkins for Old (St. Martin's Press). |
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Robert Protherough,
a former teacher of English and education at Hull University (UK)
and currently concerned with arts management, is the author of a dozen
books, most recently The Challenge of English in the National
Curriculum (Routledge, 1995). |
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Nancy Reisman teaches
fiction at the University of Florida. She has received fellowships
from the National Endowment for the Arts, the University of Wisconsin,
the Heekin Group Foundation, and the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown.
Her recent work has appeared in Glimmer Train, American Fiction,
Lilith, and Conduit. |
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Melissa Bowen Rubin
lives in Brooklyn with her husband and their ten-year-old son. She
recently received her B.A. with a major in Russian and minor in Classical
Studies from Hunter College |
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Nicholas Samaras won
a 1997-98 National Endowment for the Arts Poetry Fellowship. His first
book won the Yale Series Award. His second book, Survivors of
the Moving Earth, was published by the University of Salzburg
Press. |
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Willard Spiegelman,
Hughes Professor of English at Southern Methodist University and editor
of the Southern Review, is planning a book of essays on contemporary
poetry. |
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Alison Stine is an undergraduate
at Denison University. Her first publishing credit was in Hanging
Loose at age sixteen. Other works have appeared in Dramatics
and Whiskey Island. In 1997 she was a finalist in the Wick
Student Series. |
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Ruth Stone's recent
books are Simplicity and Ordinary Words, both published
by Paris Press. She teaches at SUNY Binghamton. |
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Thomas S. Turgeon is
professor of drama at Kenyon College. His book, Improvising Shakespeare:
Reading for the Stage, was published by McGraw-Hill in 1997. |
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Lee Upton's fourth collection
of poetry, Civilian Histories, is forthcoming from the University
of Georgia Press. |
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Ellen Bryant Voigt's
fifth volume of poems, Kyrie (Norton, 1995), was a National
Book Critics Circle Award finalist. "The Flexible Lyric"
is the title essay of her prose collection, forthcoming from the University
of Georgia Press. |
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David Wagoner's fifteenth
book of poems, Walt Whitman Bathing, was published by Illinois
in 1966. He edits Poetry Northwest, and won the Ruth Lilly
Prize in 1991. |

Photo by Clover Earl |
Katharine Whitcomb,
a 1998-99 J.C. and Ruth Halls Poetry Fellow at the Wisconsin Institute
for Creative Writing, University of Wisconsin at Madison, is seeking
a publisher for her first poetry manuscript, Saints of South Dakota. |