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Lorene
Delany-Ullman’s book of prose poems, Camouflage
for the Neighborhood, (Firewheel Editions, 2012)
was the winner of the 2011 Sentence Award. In addition,
she has most recently published creative nonfiction
and poetry in AGNI 74, Cimarron
Review, Zócalo Public Square, Naugatuck River
Review, and Chaparral.
Her poems have been included in anthologies such as Beyond
Forgetting: Poetry and Prose about Alzheimer’s
Disease (Kent State University Press, 2009)
and Alternatives to Surrender (Plain
View Press, 2007). |
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Anna
Leahy’s Constituents of
Matter won the Wick Poetry Prize, and her poetry
appears in literary journals and anthologies, most recently A
Face to Meet the Faces, City of the Big Shoulders,
and Becoming. Anna Leahy
co-writes the blog Lofty Ambitions (http://loftyambitions.wordpress.com),
and her nonfiction appears in The
Pinch, The Southern Review, and other venues.
She edited the book Power and
Identity in the Creative Writing Classroom and
publishes articles about creative writing pedagogy and
the profession. |
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Louise
Mathias was born in Bedford, England. She grew up in
Suffolk and, later, Los Angeles. She is the author of
two full-length
poetry collections: The Traps (Four
Way Books, 2013) and Lark Apprentice (New
Issues Press, 2004) which won the 2003 New Issues Poetry
Prize. Her chapbook, Above All
Else, the Trembling Resembles a Forest, won the
Burnside Review Chapbook Competition and was published
by Burnside Review in 2010. |
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Amy
Newlove Schroeder's first book, The
Sleep Hotel, received the Field Prize and was
published by Oberlin College Press in 2010. A founding
editor of the literary journal POOL,
Amy now teaches writing at USC. Her poems and essays
have appeared in American Poetry
Review, Boston Review, Witness, Field, Colorado Review,
and Ploughshares. |
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