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Winter 2004
New Series · Volume XXVI Number 1
Contents
· Contributors
·
Selections
·
Editor's Notes & Cover Art
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| contributors |
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John
Bensko’s most recent book of poetry is The Iron City
(University of Illinois Press). A collection of stories, Sea Dogs,
is forthcoming from Graywolf Press in June 2004. Bensko teaches in
the M.F.A. program at the University of Memphis. |
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Mark
Evans Bryan is a member of the theater faculty at Denison University.
Mercury Seven with Signs Following premiered in January 2003
with actor Sue Ott Rowlands. |
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Alison
Bundy’s most recent book is Duncecap (Burning
Deck, 1998), a collection of short fiction. Other works include
A Bad Business (Lost Roads) and Tale of a Good Cook
(Paradigm Press). She lives in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, and is at
work on a novel. |
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In 2003, Albert
Goldbarth became a two-time winner of the National Book Critics
Circle Award in poetry, as well as a recipient of the PEN West annual
award in creative nonfiction. His recent novel Pieces of Payne
is from Graywolf Press, which in 2003 also published a new collection
of poems, Budget Travel Through Space and Time. He lives
in Wichita, Kansas. |
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Rachel
Hadas is the Board of Governors Professor of English at the
Newark campus of Rutgers University and the author of over a dozen
books of poetry, essays, and translations. Forthcoming in 2004: her
new collection of poems, Laws. |
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Laura
Kasischke’s most recent collection of poems, Dance
and Disappear, won the Juniper Award and was published by the
University of Massachusetts Press in 2002. She is the author of four
other poetry collections and three novels. |
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Mabel
Lee was born in 1939 of Chinese parents in northern New South
Wales, Australia. She majored in Chinese studies at the University
of Sydney where she obtained her Ph.D. in 1966 and accepted an academic
appointment in the same year. Her research publications focused on
late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Chinese intellectual
history until the 1990s when she began translating the works of two
contemporary writers, Yang Lian and Gao Xingjian. In 2001 Lee received
the NSW Premier’s Prize for Translation and the PEN Medallion,
and in 2003 she received a Centenary Medal “for service to Australian
society and literature.” |
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Dana
Levin’s first book, In the Surgical Theatre,
received the 1999 APR/Honickman Prize and many other awards. A 1999
NEA and 2001 Lannan Residency Fellow, Levin directs the creative writing
program at College of Santa Fe. These poems are from “Wedding
Day,” a new manuscript. |
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Lee
Martin is the author of a novel, Quakertown (Dutton,
2001); a memoir, From Our House (Dutton, 2000); a story collection,
The Least You Need to Know (Sarabande, 1996); and an essay
collection, Turning Bones, forthcoming from the University
of Nebraska Press. He teaches in the creative writing program at Ohio
State University. |
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Erin
McGraw is the author of, most recently, The Baby Tree
(Story Line Press, 2002). Later this year Houghton-Mifflin will publish
a collection of her stories, Appearance of Scandal, which
will include “The Penance Practicum.” Her stories and
poems have appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, Story,
and other publications. She teaches at Ohio State University. |
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Winner of a Massachusetts
artist’s grant, Robert McKean has
published two stories from his collection in the Chicago Review.
His novel-in-progress was a finalist in the Heekin Group James Fellowship
competition. |
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Steve
Orlen has published five books of poetry, most recently This
Particular Eternity (Ausable Press, 2001). He teaches at the
University of Arizona and in the low-residency M.F.A. program at Warren
Wilson College, Swannano, North Carolina. |
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Rowan
Ricardo Phillips is an assistant professor of English and codirector
of the Poetry Center at Stony Brook University. He lives in New York
City. |
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John
Rodden is at work on a book tentatively titled Celebrations
and Attacks on Irving Howe. His other works include Lionel
Trilling and the Critics (1999) and a new edition of George
Orwell: The Politics of Literary Reputation (Transaction, 2002). |
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Alan
Shapiro’s most recent book of poems, Song and Dance,
was published by Houghton Mifflin in 2002. |
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Nance
Van Winckel’s fourth collection of poems, Beside
Ourselves, is forthcoming from Miami University Press. A recipient
of two NEA poetry fellowships, she teaches in the graduate writing
programs at Eastern Washington University and Vermont College. |
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David
Wagoner’s most recent book of poems is The House
of Song (University of Illinois Press, 2002). He teaches at the
University of Washington and edited Poetry Northwest for
thirty-six years. |
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Jennifer
A. Wagner-Lawlor is professor of English and associate dean
of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Memphis.
She has authored or edited two books on nineteenth-century British
literature. Recent essays have appeared in SEL (fall 2002)
and in Utopian Studies. |
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Gao
Xingjian was born in 1940 in Jiangxi province in eastern
China. He majored in French literature at the Beijing Foreign Languages
Institute, graduating in 1962. The publication of his Preliminary
Discussions on the Art of Modern Fiction (Huacheng, 1981; banned
1982) and the staging of his controversial plays Absolute Signal
(1982), Bus Stop (1983; banned 1983) and Wild
Man (1985) at the Beijing People’s Theatre displeased
the authorities and he was subjected to various forms of harassment.
In late 1987 he relocated to Paris where he has been able to devote
himself to his writing and painting. Gao’s winning the 2000
Nobel Prize for Literature meant that it was the first time the
prize had been awarded for a body of Chinese-language writings.
Among Gao’s works, the novel Soul Mountain (HarperCollins
2000) was singled out for special acclaim by the Swedish Academy.
Gao’s other English-language fiction include the novel One
Man’s Bible (HarperCollins 2002) and a forthcoming collection
of short stories, Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather
(HarperCollins 2004).
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