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Spring 1999
New Series · Volume XXI Number
Contents ·
Contributors ·
Editor's Notes & Cover Art |
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Dante Alighieri,
one of the supreme poets of world literature, was born in Florence,
May 1265, to a noble but not wealthy family. He was a poet of note
from his early years and provided service to his commune as ambassador.
Political differences led to years of exile before his death near
Ravenna in September 1321. |
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Daniel Anderson
received a 1995 fellowship in poetry from the New Jersey State Council
on the Arts. His first collection of poems, January Rain,
won the 1997 Nicholas Roerich prize and was published by Story Line
Press. |
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Mario Benedetti,
one of Latin America's most noted authors, is a poet, novelist, essayist,
critic, journalist, dramatist, and songwriter. His works are represented
in anthologies published in Latin America, Spain, Israel, England,
and the United States. He was a leading opponent of the now defunct
military regime in his native Uruguay and now lives in Montevideo
and Madrid. |
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Erin Grace Brooks
is a Ph.D. candidate in the creative writing program and a teacher
at the University of Houston. She received a 1996 Ruth Lilly poetry
fellowship and a 1998 Houston Emerging Artist fellowship. |
 Photo
by Hank De Leo |
Alice Fulton's
most recent book of poems is Sensual Math (W.W. Norton).
A collection of essays, Feeling as a Foreign Language: The Good
Strangeness of Poetry, is forthcoming from Graywolf Press. She
is professor of English at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. |
 Photo
by Diane Zucker |
Eamon Grennan's
four books of poetry include Relations: New and Selected Poems (Greywolf).
His translations of Leopardi were published by Princeton University
Press. He teaches at Vassar College. |
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Bob Hicok's
latest book is Plus Shipping (BOA Editions, 1998). The Legend
of Light won the 1995 Pollak Prize and was an ALA Booklist notable
book of the year. |
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Conrad Hilberry's
most recent book is Sorting the Smoke: New and Selected Poems
(University of Iowa, 1990). A new collection will be published this
year by Louisiana State University Press. Hilberry teaches at Kalamazoo
College. |
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Marilyn Horton-Barrios's
poems have appeared in Blue Mesa Review, Colorado Review,
and elsewhere. A 1989 M.A. graduate of the University of New Mexico
creative writing program, she teaches adults to write poetry in the
continuing education division of the university. |
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Philip Levine
was born in 1928 in Detroit and was educated at public schools and
at Wayne University. After many industrial jobs he left the city and
lived in various places before settling in Fresno, California, where
he taught at the university until his recent retirement. He has received
many awards for his books of poems, most recently the National Book
Award in 1991, for What Work Is, and the 1995 Pulitzer Prize
for The Simple Truth. |
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Arnost Lustig's
awards include a National Book Award nomination for A Prayer of
Katerina Horovitzova, two Jewish National Book Awards, an Emmy
for a television screenplay, and the Karel Capek Prize of the Czech
Pen Club. He teaches literature at the American University in Washington,
D.C. |
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Kai Maristed,
whose work first appeared in Germany, now lives in Massachusetts.
She is author of two novels, Fall and Out After Dark,
and a recent collection of stories, Belong to Me.
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Jo McDougall's
most recent book of poetry is From Darkening Porches, University
of Arkansas Press, 1996. She is author of two other books of poetry
and two chapbooks and was a 1994 fellow at MacDowell. One of her poems
is the subject of a filmscript for a work in progress by independent
filmmaker Don Maxwell. |
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Kim McMullen
is an associate professor at Kenyon College where she teaches courses
in twentieth-century Irish literature and American literature. She
is working on a book entitled Decolonizing Rosaleen, which
analyzes the intersection of gender, sexuality, and national identity
in contemporary Irish fiction, poetry, and film. |
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by Matthew Carlos Schwartz |
W. S. Merwin's
most recent books are The Vixen (Knopf, 1996), Flower
& Hand (Copper Canyon, 1997), and a book-length poem, The
Folding Cliffs (Knopf, 1998). East Window, collected translations
from Asian poetry (Copper Canyon), is forthcoming. |
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Harry Morales'
work appears in Prospero's Mirror: A Translator's Portfolio of
Latin American Short Fiction (Curbstone Press, 1998) and in The
Oxford Book of Latin American Essays (Oxford, 1997). He has completed
a new English translation of Mario Benedetti's second award-winning
novel, La Tregua. Morales lives in Manhattan. |
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Ewald Osers,
a noted translator with many prizes to his credit, was born in Prague
and, from the beginning of World War II, has lived in England. He
retired from the BBC Monitoring Service in 1971. He has translated
more than 120 books and is a frequent speaker on translation at European
and American universities. |
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Gary Pacernick
is the author of several poetry volumes and critical texts and edited
the letters of David Ignatow. He has also had several plays performed
on various stages and for many years edited the poetry magazine Images.
He is professor of English at Wright State University. |
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Jaufre Rudel,
dates unknown, wrote in the twelfth century. |
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Mary Ann Samyn's
Rooms by the Sea won the 1994 Wick Chapbook Prize and her
poems have appeared in Ohio Review, Northwest Review, Laurel Review,
Verse, and Nimrod. She was a Hoyns Fellow and M.F.A. graduate of the
University of Virginia. |
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by Irene Fertik |
David St. John's
most recent collection, Study for the World's Body: New and
Selected Poems (HarperCollins, 1994), was nominated for the
National Book Award in poetry. |
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by Glenn Coneau |
Reetka Vazirani,
Margaret Banister writer-in-residence at Sweet Briar College, is a
contributing editor of Shenandoah and recipient of a 1998
Poets & Writers exchange award. She lives in Sweet Briar, Virginia. |
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Patricia Vigderman's
essays and reviews have appeared in the Boston Review, Nation,
New York Times, Parabola, and other publications.
She teaches film and creative writing at Kenyon College. |
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by Jimmy Russell |
Miller Williams
is author, editor, or translator of twenty-eight books, including
twelve volumes of poetry. He has been widely recognized with national
and international awards and with two honorary degrees and was inaugural
poet for the second inauguration of President Clinton. Recent books
of poetry include Living on the Surface: New and Selected Poems
(LSU Press), Adjusting to the Light (University of Missouri
Press), and Points of Departure and The Ways We Touch
(both from University of Illinois Press). |
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Kevin Young's
first book, Most Way Home, won the National Poetry Series
and the Zacharis First Book Prize from Ploughshares. Recent
poems have appeared in Paris Review and Seneca Review;
a selection from his completed manuscript on the late painter Jean-Michel
Basquiat appeared in Kenyon Review last spring. An assistant
professor at University of Georgia, Young is currently writing a book
of essays on race, modernism, and literature. |
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Nancy Zafris
has published stories in The Kenyon Review, Missouri
Review, Witness, Gettysburg Review, and many
other magazines. Her first book, The People I Know, won a
Flannery O'Connor Award for short fiction and an Ohioana Library Association
award. She has completed a novel and a new collection of short stories. |