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Glenn Bach
See Glenn Bach's work.


Wystan Curnow See Wystan Curnow's work.


Alexander Jorgensen was born and raised of the most mixed and common stock. An insistent traveler, he has lived in the Czech Republic, the Galapagos Archipelago, and the People's Republic of China (where he currently resides and works). Additionally, he has sought adventure in such disparate places as Milwaukee, Wisconsin and the Himalayas. His work has appeared in One Less, BathHouse and Issues. See Alexander Jorgensen's work.


Jennifer Firestone
teaches poetry at Eugene Lang College, The New School for Liberal Arts, where she was recently appointed Poet In Residence. She iscurrently editing a book of epistolary dialogues between well-known, contemporary poets called Letters To Poets: Conversations about Poetics, Politics and Community. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in the following journals: Lungfull! magazine, How2, Poetry Salzburg Review, Can We Have Our Ball Back, Fourteen Hills,  Milk Magazine, Interim, moria, The Cortland Review, Phoebe, Karamu, Connecticut Poetry Review, South Carolina Review, Passages North, Feminist Studies, Parnassus Literary Journal, Beacon Street Review and others. See Jennifer Firestone's work.


Jason Fraley works at an investment firm in West Virginia and is pursing his M.B.A. His wife and cat see him occasionally. He has appeared or is forthcoming in Forklift, Ohio, edactions, DIAGRAM, Pebble Lake Review, Small Spiral Notebook, The Salt River Review, and elsewhere. See Jason Fraley's work.


VernonFrazer has published eight books of poetry and three books of fiction. His work has appeared in Aught, Big Bridge, First Intensity, Jack Magazine, Lost and Found Times, Moria, Miami SunPost, Muse Apprentice Guild, Sidereality, Xstream and many other literary magazines. His web site is http://vernonfrazer.com. His most recent works are the longpoems Avenue Noir and IMPROVISATIONS, the now-completed work which he introduced in his 2001 reading at the Poetry Project. Frazer is married and lives in South Florida. See Vernon Frazer's work (1) (2) (3) (4) (5).


David B. Goldstein is currently featured online at Alice Blue and Dusie, and has appeared in The Paris Review, Epoch, Shampoo, Zeek, Watchword, and other journals.  He teaches creative writing and Renaissance literature at the University of Tulsa, where he is currently completing a book of poems and a critical work about digestion and originality in early modern England. See David B. Goldstein's work.


Andy Gricevich is a poet, actor, director and musician living in Madison, Wisconsin. He is a founding member of The Nonsense Company, a trio performing contemporary chamber music and theater. As one half of the cabaret/satire duo The Prince Myshkins, he has traveled the U.S. singing wordy, funny, irate songs at large protests and in classrooms, coffeehouses, living rooms and sheds. His poems have appeared in CanWeHaveOurBallBack?, Dirt, Luzmag, Mirage#4/Period(ical), Moria,Shadow Train, Unlikely Stories, and other lovely publications. See Andy Gricevich's work.

Arielle Guy is a Brooklyn poet and fiction writer whose work has appeared in Zyzzyva, 6x6, Carve, EOAGH, and Small Town, among other places. Her chapbook, Gothenburg, part of the larger manuscript, Three Geogaophies: A Milkmaid's Grimoire, was published last year by ypolita press. She is the author of the graphic novel, Maia Sierra's Blood Journals, and edits the online arts magazine, Turntable and Bluelight. See Arielle Guy's work.


Roberto Harrison is the author of Counter Daemons, published by Litmus Press in August, 2006. He lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin where he works as a Systems Librarian. He edits Crayon with Andrew Levy, and the Bronze Skull Press chapbook series. See Roberto Harrison's work.


Marc Lowe is a restless wanderer who has recently returned to the U.S. from two years of living and teaching in Japan.  His fictions and hybrids can be found in various corners of the web, including The Angler, Elimae, Internet Fiction, Mad Hatters' Review, Mindfire Renewed (featured experimental writer), Opium Magazine, and Pindeldyboz. Work is also slated to appear in print in the "Butterflies of Vertigo" anthology, and in Monkey Bicycle Issue #5.  He hopes you'll visit his website @ http://malo23.com for more. See Marc Lowe's work.


Erin L. Martin is an MFA student at the University of Alabama. She has past or pending publications in can we have our ball back?, Coconut Poetry, H_ngm_n, and Unpleasant Event Schedule. See Erin L. Martin's work.


Christopher Mulrooney's
has written poems and translations in  Beeswax,  Vanitas, Guernica,  Ezra,  echolocation,  fourW and The Delinquent.. See Christopher Mulrooney's work.


Stephen Ratcliffe’s latest books of poetry are Portraits & Repetition (The Post-Apollo Press, 2002) and SOUND/(system) (Green Integer, 2002).  Recent poems have appeared in 1913, Chain, Denver Quarterly, P-QUEUE, New American Writing, LIT, Bombay Gin, Common Knowledge, War & Peace, Conjunctions and NO:.  Listening to Reading, a book of essays on sound/shape and meaning in ‘experimental’ poetry, was published by SUNY Press in 2000.  He has recently completed a 1,000 page book of poems called HUMAN / NATURE (1,000 poems written in 1,000 consecutive days).  He lives in Bolinas, California where he publishes Avenue B, and teaches at Mills College in Oakland. See Stephen Ratcliffe's work.


Francis Raven is a graduate student in philosophy at Temple University.  His first book of poems, Taste: Gastronomic Poems (Blazevox, 2005), and novel Inverted Curvatures (Spuyten Duyvil, 2005), were recently published.  Poems of his have been published in Mudlark, Conundrum, Chain, Big Bridge, Le Petite Zine, Caffeine Destiny, and Can We Have Our Ball Back?  among others. My critical work can be found in Jacket, Clamor, The Emergency Almanac, The Morning News, The Brooklyn Rail, Media and Culture, In These Times, The Fulcrum Annual, Rain Taxi, Sauce, and Pavement Saw. See Francis Raven's work.


Linda Russo See Linda Russo's work.


Tom Savage
See Tom Savage's work.


Autotypographer Jeremy James Thompson was born in Los Angeles. He obtained a Master of Fine Arts Degree in the discipline of Poetics at Mills College. He currently functions as the Stein Scholar, studying, teaching and printing, at the Center for Book Arts in New York City. His work focuses on the process of collaboration, the reinvention of propaganda, and the defining of a practical avant-garde. For further information, go to www.autotypograph.com and autotypist.blogspot.com. See Jeremy James Thompson's work.


While everyone else was going to school, Mark Terrill was working and traveling, shipping out as a merchant seaman, and touring with various rock bands in the capacity of road manager. In 1982 he was a participant in Paul Bowles’s writing workshop in Tangier, Morocco, and after extended stays in Tangier, Lisbon, Paris and Hamburg, he's lived in Germany since 1984, where he's been scraping by in various guises, including shipyard welder, cook and postal worker. Recent books include The United Colors of Death (Pathwise Press), Bread & Fish (The Figures) and Kid with Gray Eyes (Cedar Hill Books). Other poems, prose, translations and reviews in Bombay Gin, City Lights Review, Fish Drum, Exquisite Corpse, Skanky Possum, Talisman, Chelsea, Partisan Review, Van Gogh's Ear, Rain Taxi and elsewhere.
See Mark Terrill's work.


Rosemary Winslow has published in numerous journals, including 32 Poems, Poet Lore, and The Southern Review; in anthologies, including Voices from Frost Place and The Why and After (forthcoming, Deep Cleveland Press); and she has received the Larry Neal Award twice, as well as writers' grants from the District of Columbia Commission on the Arts and the Vermont Studio Center.  A book of poems and a chapbook are near completion.
See Rosemary Winslow's work.