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Summer 2004
New Series · Volume XXVI Number 3
Contents
· Contributors
·
Selections
·
Editor's Notes & Cover Art
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| contributors |
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Gail
Galloway Adams is an associate professor of English at West
Virginia University. She won the Flannery O’Connor Short Fiction
Award for The Purchase of Order, the title story of which
is included in The Prentice Hall Anthology of Women’s Literature.
Her most recent publications have appeared in Gulf Coast, Sycamore
Review, and Story Quarterly. |
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Andrea
Barrett is the author of five novels, most recently The
Voyage of the Narwhal, and two collections of short fiction,
Ship Fever, which received the 1996 National Book Award,
and Servants of the Map. She has received National Endowment
for the Arts, Guggenheim, and MacArthur Fellowships. |
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Courtney
Angela Brkic is the author of Stillness and Other Stories
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2003). Her second book, The Stone
Fields, will be published later this year. |
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Herman
G. Carrillo divides his time between San Juan, Puerto Rico,
and Ithaca, New York, where he is an M.F.A./Ph.D. candidate and instructor
in the Department of English at Cornell University. His work has appeared
in Glimmer Train, Threshold, and Other Voices magazines.
Awarded a Sage Fellowship, a Provost’s Fellowship, a Newberry
Library Research Grant, and the 2001 Glimmer Train Fiction Open First
Prize, he was the 2002 Alan Collin’s Scholar for Fiction, the
recipient of both the 2001 and 2003 Arthur Lynn Andrews Prizes for
Best Fiction, a 2003 shortlisting for the O. Henry Prize, and a 2003
Constance Saltonstall Foundation Grant to an Individual Artist. His
first novel, Loosing My Espanish, will be published by Pantheon
this year. |
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Howell
Chickering holds the G. Armour Craig Professorship of Language
and Literature at Amherst College. He is the author of Beowulf:
A Dual-Language Edition (Anchor, 1977) and “Stanzaic Closure
and Linkage in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight,” Chaucer
Review 32: 1 (1997): 1-31. |
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Steven
Cramer is the author of The Eye That Desires to Look Upward
(1987), The World Book (1992), Dialogue for the Left
and Right Hand (1997), and Goodbye to the Orchard (Sarabande,
2004). He directs the low-residency M.F.A. creative writing program
at Lesley University. |
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Lisa
Croneberg’s poetry has appeared in Ploughshares,
American Scholar, Chelsea, and River City. She is the
recipient of a Bread Loaf scholarship and a fellowship from the Ragdale
Foundation. She lives in Arlington Heights, Illinois. |
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A Korean-born writer,
Maija Rhee Devine has had her fiction, nonfiction,
and poetry published in Michigan Quarterly Review, Northern Lights,
Chattahoochee Review, Boulevard, and anthologies (Dutiful
Daughters, 1999, and Hard Ground, 2001). Awards include
a National Endowment for the Arts grant and the 2002 Boulevard short
story prize. She is completing her first novel, Azalea Wine,
and a collection of poems, Never Pick the Fifth of the Month for
Your Birthday. |
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E.
L. Doctorow’s novels include Ragtime, The Book of
Daniel, Welcome to Hard Times, Billy Bathgate, Loon Lake, The Waterworks,
World’s Fair, and City of God. A collection of
essays, Reporting the Universe (Harvard University Press),
was published in 2003. A volume of short fiction, Sweet Land Stories
(Random House), is just published. His literary honors include the
National Book Critics Circle Award, the National Book Award, the PEN/Faulkner
Award, and the William Dean Howells Medal of the American Academy
of Arts and Letters. In 1998, he was awarded the National Humanities
Medal at the White House. In 2003, he was selected for the first Kenyon
Review Award for Literary Achievement. |
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Sharon
Dolin’s collection of ekphrastic poems, Serious Pink,
was published in 2003 by Marsh Hawk Press. Another poetry collection,
Realm of the Possible, is due out this fall from Four Way
Books. Dolin teaches at the 92nd Street Y and coordinates the Center
for Book Arts chapbook competition in New York City. |
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Stephen
Dunn is the author of twelve collections of poetry, including
the recent Local Visitations (Norton). His Different
Hours (Norton, 2000) was awarded the 2001 Pulitzer Prize. |
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Roger
Fanning’s first book of poems was a National Poetry Series
selection. His second book, Homesick, was published in 2002
by Viking-Penguin. |
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David
Ferry’s most recent translations, all published by Farrar,
Straus & Giroux, are The Odes of Horace (1997), The
Eclogues of Virgil (1999), and The Epistles of Horace
(2001), which won the 2002 Harold Morton Landon Prize for Translation,
Academy of American Poets. His most recent book of poems, Of No
Country I Know: Selected Poems and Translations (University of
Chicago Press, 1999), won the 2000 Lenore Marshall Prize, Academy
of American Poets, and the 2000 Rebekah Johnson Bobbitt National Prize
for Poetry, Library of Congress. In 2001 he received an Academy Award
for Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. |
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Albert
Goldbarth’s new collection, Budget Travel through
Space and Time (which includes the two poems in this issue),
is forthcoming from Graywolf Press in spring 2005. |
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Jeremy
Harding’s translations from Arthur Rimbaud’s work
will appear later this year in a new Penguin Classics selection of
the poet’s verse and letters. |
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Terrance
Hayes is the author of Hip Logic (Penguin, 2002),
which was a 2001 National Poetry Series selection, and runner-up for
the 2002 James Laughlin Award. His debut collection, Muscular
Music (Tia Chucha Press, 1999), won the Kate Tufts Discovery
Award and a Whiting Writers Award. |
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Todd
Hearon’s work has appeared in Harvard Review, Partisan
Review, and numerous other journals. He was the winner of the
2000 Paul Green Playwrights Prize and finalist (with CornRockets)
for the 2002 Heideman Award. In 2003 he held a Dobie Paisano writing
fellowship at the University of Texas in Austin. |
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Michael
Heffernan teaches poetry at the University of Arkansas. He
has won three fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts.
His seventh book, The Night Breeze Off the Ocean, will be
published later this year. |
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T.
R. Hummer’s seventh book of poems, Useless Virtues,
was published by LSU Press in 2001. He lives in Athens, Georgia, where
he edits the Georgia Review. |
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Paul
Kane has published two collections of poems, The Farther
Shore and Drowned Lands. He teaches at Vassar College. |
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Joanna
Klink teaches at the University of Montana. The author of They
Are Sleeping (University of Georgia Press, 2000), she is currently
at work on a second book of poems, Circadian. |
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Billy
Lopez is a recent graduate of Amherst College. He lives and
writes in New York City. He has recently developed an original poetic
form, some examples of which he hopes to publish soon. |
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David
H. Lynn’s most recent novel is Wrestling with Gabriel. |
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Cate
Marvin’s first book of poems, World’s Tallest
Disaster, was published by Sarabande in 2001. She teaches at
the College of Staten Island-CUNY. |
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C.
M. Mayo is the author of Miraculous Air: Journey of a Thousand
Miles through Baja California, the Other Mexico, and Sky
over El Nido, which won the Flannery O’Connor Award for
Short Fiction. |
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Sandra
McPherson’s most recent poetry collection is A Visit
to Civilization (Wesleyan, 2002). She is also the editor and
publisher of Swan Scythe Press as well as a professor of English at
the University of California at Davis. |
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D.
Nurkse is the author of seven collections of poetry, most recently
The Fall (Knopf, 2002). |
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Donald
Platt’s second book, Cloud Atlas, was published
in 2002 by Purdue University Press as the winner of the Verna Emery
Poetry Prize. His poems have recently appeared or are forthcoming
in Georgia Review, Shenandoah, Michigan Quarterly Review, Alaska
Quarterly Review, Black Warrior Review, Notre Dame Review, BOMB Magazine,
Meridian, Colorado Review, Virginia Quarterly Review, and Southern
Review. His poems have also been anthologized in The Best
American Poetry 2000 and in The Pushcart Prize XXVII (2003
edition). He is an associate professor of English at Purdue University. |
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Arthur
Rimbaud was born in 1854. He abandoned his brief poetic career
at the age of twenty, going on to become a trader in coffee, hides,
ivory, and weapons in the Horn of Africa. His works include A
Season in Hell and Illuminations, a collection of prose-poems.
His poems in verse are among the most famous in nineteenth-century
European literature. He died in 1891 at the age of thirty-seven. |
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Antun
Branko Simic (1898-1925) was born in Drinovci, Herzegovina.
He led a short and difficult life, dying of tuberculosis at the age
of twenty-seven in Zagreb. Only one collection of his work was published
during his lifetime—Preobrazenja (Metamorphoses)
in 1925—but it paved the way for much of contemporary Croatian
poetry. He was initially influenced by German Expressionism, but quickly
found his own, independent voice. Beneath the surface of his seemingly
cold and rational poetry is a passionate stance toward the world.
The themes which most concerned him were physicality, God, and death.
Alongside Tin Ujevic and Miroslav Krleza, he is one of the most important
and developed Croatian literary voices of the interwar period. During
his short life, he wrote numerous articles, polemics, and essays and
was responsible for starting several literary magazines. Sabrana
Djela (Selected Works) was published posthumously in 1960. |
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Elizabeth
Spires is the author of five poetry collections, most recently
Now the Green Blade Rises (Norton, 2002), and five books
for children. She lives in Baltimore and is a professor of English
at Goucher College. |
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Nance
Van Winckel’s fourth collection of poetry is Beside
Ourselves (Miami University Press, 2003). She has received two
National Endowment for the Arts Poetry Fellowships. New poems appear
in American Poetry Review, Gettysburg Review, Ploughshares, New
Letters, and DoubleTake. She has also published three
books of short stories, most recently Curtain Creek Farm
(Persea Books, 2000). She teaches in the M.F.A. programs at Eastern
Washington University and Vermont College. |
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Ellen
Bryant Voigt has published The Flexible Lyric (essays)
and six books of poems, including Shadow of Heaven, a 2002
National Book Award finalist. A former Vermont State Poet, she has
also been inducted into the Fellowship of Southern Writers. |
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