contributors' biographies

Contributors’ Biographies:

Aidan Baker is a graduate in English Literature and Religious Studies from McGill University in Montréal. He has published poetry in such magazines as The Columbia Review, Stanzas, and Hook & Ladder.

Holly Day is widely published, most recently in 69 Flavors of Paranoia, Purgatoire, and Scavenger’s Newsletter.

Sandra DeLuca has a degree in fine arts and has been exhibiting paintings in both group and solo shows for the past ten years. Her poetry has appeared in Poetry Cafe, Poetry Express, and other online magazines.

Frances Donovan graduated from Vassar College in 1995 with a B.A. in English. Currently she earns her keep by writing about insurance on the Web. Her poetry has appeared in Chronogram, Helicon, and elsewhere.

Schar CBear Freeman is an activist-poet-visual artist of Native Wintun and Spanish heritage who lives in Portland, Oregon. Her poetry has appeared in various anthologies and First Nation circles, winning international awards.

Jared Millar is best know around Hollywood for such films as “Plan 9 From Outer Mongolia” and “I Was a Fugitive From the Religious Right!”

William Monigold has been in the Army, married and in jail twice . . . but still says that high school was the worst experience of his life.

Lee Moskow has only recently begun to send his poetry out but is having great success; the three poems included here are only three from a larger collection under the name of “Silhouettes.”

Mark Ramirez is a native of the Philippines; he moved to the United States fairly recently and currently resides in Amherst, Massachusetts.

Mark Taylor served in the U.S. Marines from 1966 to 1970 as a jack of all trades on a CH-53 helicopter. He says it’s taken twenty years to come home mentally, and even longer before he was able to write about the experience.

Wyldestorms does “not perceive [him]self as occupying a particular place nor in the essence of truth and experience being of a particular gender.” Nevertheless he will confess, when pressed, to being male.


















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