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Winter 1998
New Series · Volume XX Number 1
Contents ·
Contributors ·
Editor's Notes & Cover Art |
| contributors |
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A.R. AMMONS's latest
book, Glare, was published this summer. He was awarded the
Lily Prize in 1995 and his work has appeared in American Poetry Review. |
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MIRA BARTOK-BARATTA
is author and illustrator of the Ancient and Living Culture Series
(Addison-Wesley). Recent publications include fiction in Artful
Dodger and translations of her husband Edward's poetry in the
Italian journal Steve. She used a recent Fulbright grant
to study the oral traditions of the indigenous Smi of Scandinavia
in the Arctic Circle of Norway. |
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PHILIP BOOTH's most
recent books of poems are Selves and Pairs (Viking Penguin
1990, 1994). His essays were published by University of Michigan Press
in 1996 as Trying to Say It / Outlooks and Insights on How Poems
Happen. |
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ELLEN CANTOR's poetry
manuscript in progress centers on letters written by her father while
stationed in France during World War II. Cantor teaches English at
Lane Community College, Eugene, Oregon. |
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JOHN R. CARPENTER is
a writer and translator who lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The translations
he has done with his wife, Bogdana, have won many awards. |
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PETER COOLEY teaches
creative writing at Tulane University. "Incantation" will
appear in his sixth book, Sacred Conversations, due from
Carnegie Mellon Press this winter. |
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OLENA KALYTIAK DAVIS
is author of And Her Soul Out of Nothing (University of Wisconsin),
selected by Rita Dove as recipient of the 1997 Brittingham Prize.
She lives in Juneau, Alaska. |

Photo by Ted Rosenberg |
STEPHEN DUNN's Riffs
& Reciprocities: Prose Pairs will be published by Norton
in May. His most recent book of poetry is Loosestrife (Norton,
1996), a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. |
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ROBERT GIBB is author
of three full-length poetry collections. A fourth, The Origins
of Evening, will be published by Norton this year as one of the
National Poetry Series winners. |

photo by Nathan Filbert |
ALBERT GOLDBARTH is
author of numerous collections of poetry, among which Heaven and
Earth (University of Georgia Press) received the National Book
Critics Circle Award; most recently published is Adventures in
Ancient Egypt (Ohio State). |
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MICHAEL HEFFERNAN's
fourth book of poems, Love's Answer, was the Iowa Poetry
Prize selection for 1993. He has received three fellowships in poetry
from the National Endowment for the Arts. He teaches in the creative
writing program at the University of Arkansas-Fayetteville. |
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BOB HICOK's second book,
The Legend of Light (University of Wisconsin, 1995), won
the Felix Pouak Poetry Prize and was named an ALA Booklist Notable
Book of the Year. His third will be publishedd by BOA Editions in
Fall 1998. New poems are forthcoming in Best American Poetry 1997,
Paris Review, Poetry and Southern Review. |
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A native of Virginia, CARY
HOLLADAY is author of a short-story collection, The People
Down South (University of Illinois Press, 1989). Her fiction
has appeared in Literary Review, Vignette, and Southern
Humanities Review. She lives in Memphis. |
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GORDON HUTNER teaches
at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and is editor of American
Literary History. The essay in this issue is drawn from his work
in progress on modern American fiction, reading habits, and critical
practices. |
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JULIE JENSEN's Last
Lists of My Mad Mother was part of the Common Ground Festival
in Los Angeles and the Showcase of New Plays in Pittsburgh. The play
is scheduled for productions in Hartford and Salt Lake City. Jensen
directs the graduate playwriting program at the University of Las
Vegas. |
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GEORGE KEITHLEY is author
of seven books of poetry, two plays, and numerous short stories. His
award-winning epic, The Donner Party (Braziller, 1972, 1989),
a Book-of-the-Month Club selection, has been adapted as a stage play
and as an opera. |
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JESSE LEE KERCHEVAL
is author of two books of fiction. Her book on writing, Building
Fiction, was published in 1997 by Story Press, and a memoir,
Space, about growing up near Cape Kennedy during the moon
race, is forthcoming from Algonquin Books. She teaches creative writing
at the University of Wisconsin. |
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STUART LISHAN teaches
at Ohio State University. Recent work has appeared in Chicago
Review, Boulevard, Rain City Review, Yefief, and Literary
Review. The poems in this issue are from a manuscript in progress. |
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MIKE LOHRE writes poetry
and fiction and will receive his M.F.A. from Ohio State University
this year. He grew up on a cash crop and livestock farm in southwestern
Minnesota and is finishing a novel, Gray Horse, Gray Head,
that takes its life from that rural experience. |
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DEANNE LUNDIN recently
completed an M.F.A. at the University of Michigan. Works in progress
include a novella memoir about Florida, a poetry manuscript exploring
herb lore, and a dissertation (UCLA) on American women poets and mystical
discourse. |
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CAMPBELL McGRATH's most
recent book is Spring Comes to Chicago (Ecco, 1996), recipient
of the Kingsley Tufts Prize for 1996. He teaches at Florida International
University and lives with his family in Miami Beach. |
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ROBERT MORGAN is author
of nine books of poetry, most recently Sigodlin (Wesleyan,
1990) and Green River: New and Selected Poems (Wesleyan,
1991). He is winner of the James G. Hanes Poetry Prize and the North
Carolina Award. Publisher's Weekly listed his novel The
Truest Pleasure as one of the best books of 1995. |
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THYLIAS MOSS's latest
work is Last Chance for the Tarzan Holler, a collection of
poems (Persea, 1997). Forthcoming from Avon is Tale of a Sky-blue
Dress, an autobiography. She teaches at the University of Michigan
and is a 1996 fellow of the MacArthur Foundation. |
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RANDY F. NELSON is Virginia
Lasater Irwin Professor of English at Davidson College. The author
of numerous short stories and articles on American literature, he
is completing a novel. |
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JOSIP NOVAKOVICH teaches
at the University of Cincinnati. His books, published by Gray Wolf,
are Yolk, a PEN/Hemingway Award for First Fiction finalist,
and Apricots from Chernobyl. His "Bruno" in this
issue will be included in a forthcoming collection, Salvation
and Other Disasters. Novakovich had been awarded three Pushcart
Prizes. |
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JOYCE CAROL OATES' most
recent novel is Man Crazy (Dutton), for which she received
the PEN/Malamud award. |
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JOYCE PESEROFF's most
recent book of poems is A Dog in the Lifeboat (Carnegie Mellon,
1991). She is a visiting professor of English and poet-in-residence
at the University of Massachusetts-Boston. |
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BINO A. REALUYO has
recently finished two books: In Spite of Open Eyes, a poetry
collection, and The Umbrella Country, a novel. His work is
forthcoming in Manoa, Literary Review, Confrontation, Puerto del
Sol, New Letters, and other journals. He has been a guest lecturer
at Yale University. |
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MARK RUDMAN's recent
books include a long poem, Rider, which received the National
Book Critics Circle Award in Poetry for 1994, and Real of Unknowing:
Meditations on Art, Suicide, and Other Transformations, and The
Millennium Hotel, all from Wesleyan. His next book of poems,
Provoked in Venice, is forthcoming this fall. Rudman teaches
in the English department at New York University. |
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WISLAWA SZYMBORSKA,
winner of the 1996 Nobel Prize for Literature, lives in Kraków,
Poland. She started publishing shortly after World War II and is considered
among the three best post-war Polish poets. She has produced nine
volumes of poetry, the latest being Koniec i Poczatek (The
End and the Beginning), 1993. |

Photo by Tom Victor |
ELEANOR ROSS TAYLOR
has had poems recently in Seneca Review and Shenandoah;
others are fortcoming in Southern Review, Paris Reviews, Antioch,
and other magazines. |
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ANN TOWNSEND's first
collection of poetry, Dime Store Erotics, won the Gerald
Cable Poetry Prize and will be published by Silverfish Review Press.
Her poems, essays, and stories have appeared in The Nation, Southern
Review, TriQuarterly, and other magazines and journals. |
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JOANNA TRZECIAK is pursuing
a Ph.D. in Russian literature at the University of Chicago. Her translations
of Szymborska have appeared in New Yorker, Atlantic Monthly, Times
Literary Supplement, Threepenny Review, and elsewhere. She is
working on a collection of Szymborska's poetry. Her translation of
Panna Nikt (Miss Nobody) by Tomek Fryzna was published this
fall by Doubleday. |
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ROBERT WRIGLEY's most
recent book is In the Bank of Beautiful Sins (Penguin, 1995).
He lives with his wife and children in Idaho. |