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Jonathan Alexander's most recent creative work has appeared in Chiron Review, Valparaiso Poetry Review, Salt River Review, Blithe House Quarterly, and HEArt Quarterly. He also writes non-fiction for Radical Teacher, Lambda Book Review, Feminist Teacher, and many other publications. In his spare time, Jonathan teaches English at the University of Cincinnati, and he can be contacted at jamma@fuse.net. James Cervantes' poems have appeared recently in The Boston Review, North American Review, and Quarterly West. He has published two books of poetry and his latest collection Live Music, is forthcoming from Pecan Grove Press. He is editor of the online journal The Salt River Review. Cydney Chadwick is the author of eight books/chapbooks. Her most recent publication is Benched, a novella. She is the recipient of the New American Fiction Series Award and a creative writing fellowship from the California Arts Council. Recent work of hers can be found in Thus Spake the Corpse, an Exquisite Corpse Reader edited by Andrei Codrescu and Laura Rosenthal, published by Back Sparrow Press. She lives in the countryside of Penngrove, California (approximately fifty miles north of San Francisco) where she has been running Avec publications since 1988. Additional information about Cydney and Avec Books can be found at www.poetrypress.com/avec. John M. Daniel was raised in Farmers Branch, Texas. His mystery novel, Play Melancholy Baby, was published in 1986 by Perseverance Press (distributed by Capra Press/Consortium), and his cat book, The Love Story of Sushi and Sashimi, was published in 1990 by Capra Press. His short story collection, The Woman by the Bridge, was published in fall 1991 by Dolphin-Moon Press. His memoir, One for the Books: Confessions of a Small Press Publisher, was published in 1997 by Fithian Press. His writing handbook, Structure, Style and Truth-Elements of the Short Story, was published in 1998 by Fithian Press. His story collection, Generous Helpings, will be published in fall 2001 by Shoreline Press. He is the co-editor of The World's Shortest Stories of Love and Death, published in spring 2000 by Running Press, and The World's Shortest Stories of All Time, to be published in spring 2001 by Quality Paperback Book Club. Samir Dayal is an Associate Professor of English at Bentley College, MA. Currently, he is at work, among other projects, on a book on postcolonial Indian subject construction, and on a collection of essays entitled Postcolonial Diasporas. Jascha Kessler has published 9 books of his poetry and fiction as well as 6 volumes of translations of poetry and fiction from Hungarian, Persian and Bulgarian, several of which have won major prizes.. in 2001, he completed TRAVELING LIGHT: Selected Poems of Kirsti Simonsuuri, translated from the Finnish, and OUR BEARINGS AT SEA: A Novel in Poems, translated from the Hungarian of Ottó Orbán - available from Xlibris Corporation: (www.xlibris.com). Tristram Kimbrough - age 9 - lives in England. His father writes: "He tends towards the arts and leans away from academia with great passion." Manorama Mathai writes: "My published work includes Lilies That Fester (Writers Workshop); Mulligatawny Soup (Penguin); In Other Words (anthol. Kali & Women's Press); More Short Stories of Bangkok & Beyond (anthol. Post Publishing); VOX (anthol. Sterling Newspapers) and stories in magazines. I have worked as a development communications consultant in many countries and am now living in London. George Quasha, poet, artist, writer and publisher. Author of several published books of poetry including Somapoetics, Word-Yum, Giving the Lily Back Her Hands, and Ainu Dreams. Forthcoming: works of Axial Poetics: In No Time and The Preverbs of Tell: News Torqued from Undertime. Performance collaboration with Gary Hill and Charles Stein, and with the latter numerous dialogical writing pieces on art and poetics, including the books Tall Ships, Viewer and HanD HearD/liminal objects. Anthologies include: America a Prophecy: A New Reading of American Poetry from Pre-Columbian Times to the Present (with Jerome Rothenberg) (Random House), Open Poetry (with Ronald Gross) (Simon & Schuster), An Active Anthology (Sumac) and the recent Station Hill Blanchot Reader (Barrytown, Ltd.). Co-publisher/editor of Station Hill Press (since 1978) and Barrytown, Ltd., in Barrytown, New York. Jessy Randall is the Curator of Special Collections at Colorado College. The 2River View has published an electronic, illustrated collection of her poems. Eileen Tabios is a poet, fiction writer, editor, publisher, cultural advocate and budding grape farmer. She recently founded Meritage Press (www.MeritagePress.com, based in St. Helena, CA), a multidisciplinary literary and arts press. M. L. Weber edits Sugar Mule. Karl Young began publishing mimeo and crude letterpress books in 1966. He has continued through other media since. He published books under the Membrane Press imprint from 1970 to 1990, at which time he changed the press name to Light and Dust. For the last seven years his main publication effort has been his on-line Light and Dust Anthology of Poetry. Collections of his poetry and his essays will be published during the next year. Other poems related to those which appear in Sugar Mule may be found on-line at Mary Sands's Jack Magazine, and an issue of IsiBongo guest-edited by Michael Rothenberg. |