Kev Anderson is a Chicago-based Artist, illustrator and comic creator. He works primarily with inks and watercolors with occasional touches of digital color and effects. His main influences range from Hokusai, Hiroshige, and Schiele, to Frank Miller, Tim Sale and Jaime Hernandez. His greatest passion is to tell stories through imagery. Learn more about Kev here.
Jo Ellen Aragon, a 23 year old Filipina writer, writes mostly flash fiction and short stories- though, she is currently working on a young adult novel. She graduated from California State University-Northridge in 2007 with a BA in English.
Jon Beight lives and works in Western New York. He has been published in Red Fez, Apocrypha and Abstractions, Spilling Ink Review, First Stop Fiction, and other fine publications.
Carly Berg is a pen name who wonders why the other name is paraded about in public while she is kept to the side like a dirty little secret. Her stories appear in several dozen magazines and anthologies, including PANK, Word Riot, and Bartleby Snopes.
Joshua Berida lives and writes in the Philippines. He sidelines as an adventurer looking for some place to wander in, and masquerades as a writer to create new worlds. He writes down his wanderings in The Wandering Juan.
Aaron Brand's poetry has appeared in StringTown, Mad Swirl, Nebo: A Literary Journal and Firebush: Journal of Poetry. A graduate of the M.F.A. program at Eastern Washington University, he is an arts and entertainment features reporter at the Texarkana Gazette newspaper in Texarkana, Texas.
Graeme Brasher is an Australian teacher of English, Theory of Knowledge and Chinese at an international school in Hong Kong. He writes sporadically for the sheer pleasure of words and sounds and in pursuit of clarity about issues and experiences that vex or inspire him.
Heather Cadenhead resides with her husband and son in Franklin, Tennessee. Her work has appeared in Ruminate, Relief, Birmingham Arts Journal, Blue Earth Review, Valley Voices, and other journals. She is the author of two chapbooks, Inventory of Sleeping Things (Maverick Duck Press, 2010) and The Education of a Girl (Maverick Duck Press, 2011). Previously, Heather worked in the publishing industry.
Jennifer Chow, an Asian-American writer, lives near Los Angeles. Her short fiction has appeared in IdeaGems Magazine. She also received finalist standing in Writer Advice’s Flash Prose Contest and an honorable mention in the Whispering Prairie Press Writers Contest. Fortune cookie wisdom meets her life on her blog.
Andrew Davis is a full-time college student who majors in Criminal Justice. He is a brother of Tau Kappa Epsilon and enjoys being with friends and family and enjoys capturing those moments with photography.
Spenser Davis is both an actor and playwright currently living in Chicago, where he has taken part in over thirty-five productions with theater companies across Illinois, Arkansas, Missouri, and Iowa. On the writing front, his plays have been produced across North America, (most recently in Canada). In Chicago , his work has been featured in venues such as the American Theater Company, the Chicago Dramatists, and The Second City. His short play Minimalistic Men was named one of “The Best Ten-Minute Plays of 2012” by New York's Smith & Kraus. He graduated from the University of Illinois with a Bachelor's in Creative Writing. He currently serves as the Literary Manager for both production companies: Hobo Junction Productions and Broken Nose Theater.
Otha “Vakseen” Davis III has had a month and a half solo exhibition at the Emerging Art Scene Gallery in Atlanta; and showcased his art at Los Angeles’ Noho Art Gallery, Norbertellen Gallery, Stay Gallery, The Key Club, Media Temple Studios, The Alexandria Hotel, M. Bird Salon, The Holding Co. Studios, Opulen Studios and the Rochester Art House, amongst others. His work has also been featured in Artnois Magazine, Cactus Heart Literary Magazine, Barely South Review, Penduline Press Magazine and Snax Magazine, to name a few. Learn more about Otha here.
Robert Demaree is the author of four collections of poems, including Fathers and Teachers (2007) and Mileposts (2009), both published by Beech River Books. The winner of the 2007 Conway, N.H., Library Poetry Award, he is a retired school administrator with ties to North Carolina, Pennsylvania and New Hampshire, where he lives four months of the year. He has had over 600 poems published or accepted by 130 periodicals, including Cold Mountain Review, Foliate Oak, Red Wheelbarrow, Homestead Review and Paris/Atlantic, and in four anthologies. He lives in Burlington, N.C. and Wolfeboro, N.H. Discover more at his blog.
Isabel Brome Gaddis graduated from MIT and worked as a geophysicist at Shell, then as a writer at Microsoft. She holds four certificates in embroidery and design from City and Guilds of London. Her work was featured or is forthcoming in decomP, Forge, Grey Sparrow, New Ohio Review, and OnTheBus.
Anne Goodwin writes fiction, short and long, from flash to novels, and a blog that hovers somewhat closer to reality. She loves fiction for the freedom to contradict herself and is scared of bios for fear of getting it wrong. The portal to her writing world is through her website , or sneak a snapshot.
Pamela Hammond received her BA from UCLA and an MA in art, then continued teaching part-time at the college level. About ten years later, she created Eye International. Pamela quickly learned that she prefers writing over publishing and spent the next decade as a Los Angeles-based critic for ARTnews while serving as director of publications and public affairs at California State University, Dominguez Hills. Her poetry has been published or is forthcoming in Assisi, Forge, and two chapbooks, Clearing (2011) and Encounters (2012).
Kip Hanson lives in sunny Phoenix, where his wife makes him watch Poltergeist while insisting that clowns are not scary. You can find his work scattered about the Internet, at Foundling Review, Bartleby Snopes, Monkey Bicycle, Absinthe Revival, and a few other places, proving that a blind squirrel does occasionally find a nut. When not telling lies, he makes a few bucks by cobbling together boring manufacturing articles for technical magazines.
Richard "Rick" Hartwell is a retired middle school English teacher living in Moreno Valley, California. He believes in the succinct, that the small becomes large; and, like the Transcendentalists and William Blake, that the instant contains eternity. Given his “druthers,” if he’s not writing poetry, Rick would rather still be tailing plywood in a mill in Oregon.
William Ogden Haynes is a poet and author of short fiction from Alabama who was born in Michigan and grew up a military brat. His book of poetry entitled Points of Interest appeared in 2012. He has published nearly forty poems and short stories in literary journals and his work has been anthologized multiple times. In a prior life he taught speech-language pathology at Auburn University and authored six major professional textbooks.
Martin Kiel, since retirement, has revisited his interest in literature, particularly poetry, and has participated actively in poetry writer’s workshops and local writer’s groups. He also enjoys painting, wood and stone carving, astronomy, and camping with his family in their small motor-home.
Anthony J. Langford lives in Sydney Australia. He writes stories, poetry and makes video poems. Some of his recent publications include Ink, Sweat & Tears, Mused, Citizens for Decent Literature, Crack the Spine and Eunoia Review. He works in television and has made short films, some of which have screened internationally. His novella, Bottomless River is out now through Ginninderra Press. A poetry collection, Caged without Walls, will be released in 2013. Learn more about Anthony here.
Jeremy Levine is currently a sophomore at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he is the Editor-In-Chief of the student newspaper, The Scarlet.
Jennifer MacBain-Stephens is an emerging poet who was recently published in Issue #10 of Superstition Review and has poems forthcoming in Emerge Literary Journal and Red Savina Review. She has also written three YA non-fiction books and currently lives in Iowa City, IA and works at a journal.
Brady Mueller is currently a student at Gustavus Adolphus College, studying fiction and theater. He loves to write, and hopes to give more of his voice to the world.
Brandon Meyers is the co-author of the novels Dead and Moaning in Las Vegas, The Missing Link, and The Sensationally Absurd Life and Times of Slim Dyson. He is also the co-author of the popular humor web-comic A Beer for the Shower.
Devon Newhouse is a native of Los Angeles living in Boston, where she studies history. When she is not researching and writing about actual events, she makes it up and calls it fiction.
Irene O'Garden's writing has found its way to the Off-Broadway stage (Women On Fire, Samuel French), into hardcover (Fat Girl, Harper) into prizewinning children’s books and into many literary journals and anthologies. She won a 2012 Pushcart Prize for her essay “Glad To Be Human.” Discover more at her blog.
Richard Ong's painted artwork, stories, poetry and photos have appeared in several issues of bewilderingstories.com, yesterdaysmagazette.com and The Blotter Magazine. One of these stories has been republished in print as part of an anthology titled, “Toys Remembered.” (compiled and edited by Madonna Dries Christensen).
Lisa Pellegrini resides in Warrington, PA. Her poetry has appeared in Zouch Magazine, Downer Magazine, The Rainbow Rose, and Misfits' Miscellany. She has forthcoming work appearing in Eunoia Review, Bolts of Silk, The Lascaux Review, The Rusty Nail, and other publications.
Richard King Perkins II is a state-sponsored advocate for residents in long-term care facilities. He has a wife, Vickie and a daughter, Sage. His work has appeared in hundreds of publications including Prime Mincer, Sheepshead Review, Sierra Nevada Review, Fox Cry, Prairie Winds and The Red Cedar Review.
Brenn Roorda is an aspiring writer from Iowa.
Robert Rothman lives in Northern California, near extensive trails and open space, with the Pacific Ocean over the hill. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Alembic, Cold Mountain Review, Diverse Voices Quarterly, Front Range Review, Grey Sparrow, The Griffin, Mary: A Journal of New Writing, Pank Magazine, RiverSedge, and the Meridian Anthology of Contemporary Poetry.
Wayne Scheer has published stories, poems and essays both in print and online, including Revealing Moments, a collection of flash stories, published by Thumbscrews Press. Wayne lives in Atlanta with his wife.
Frank Scozzari's fiction has previously appeared in various literary magazines, including The Kenyon Review, South Dakota Review, Folio, The Nassau Review, Roanoke Review, Pacific Review, Reed Magazine, Ellipsis Magazine, Sycamore Review, Eureka Literary Magazine, The MacGuffin, Foliate Oak, Hawai’i Pacific Review, Chrysalis Reader, and many others.
Caryl Sills is a retired English professor who has turned her hand to fiction after many years of writing essays and literary criticism. Her short stories have been published in print and online, including First Edition, Mobius, Blue Lake Review, and Black Fox Literary Magazine, among others. I am currently working on a novel that explores the post-war politics, prejudices, fears, and optimism of American society in 1948.
Suzanne J. Sprague, originally from Bad Axe, MI, is a full-time librarian and part-time author in Daytona Beach, FL, who occasionally reviews books for the Historical Novel Society. Suzanne holds degrees in literature and in library science.
Louis Staeble lives in Bowling Green, Ohio. He has had photographs appear in Trigger, Camera Obscura, This Literary Magazine, OVS and The Fine Line. His "Industrial Strength Nation" was a part of the 93rd Toledo Area Artists Exhibition, The Toledo Museum of Art. A few of his pictures are available on Etsy.
Matthew A. Taub is a writer and lawyer living in Brooklyn, NY. His work has previously appeared in Absinthe Revival and The Weekenders Magazine. He is currently working on his first novel, Death of a Dying City, a panorama of New York City's rapid gentrification and multiple ethnic enclaves through rotating character-driven vignettes, all of which are connected by an imperiled lawyer-protagonist.
Jacob Valadez is an aspiring writer from California. He currently attends UC San Diego, located in La Jolla, CA, where he is studying as an undergraduate. Mr Valadez enjoys working with form and conceptual poetry, while also not being constrained by either.
Clay Waters has had short stories published in The Santa Barbara Review, Liquid Ohio, Abyss & Apex, and Three-Lobe Burning Eye.
Kelley White has been widely published since 2000 in journals including Exquisite Corpse, Friends Journal, Nimrod, Poet Lore, Rattle, the Journal of the American Medical Association, and in a number of chapbooks and full-length collections, most recently Toxic Environment from Boston Poet Press, Two Birds in Flame, poems related to the Shaker Community at Canterbury, NH, from Beech River Books, and “In Memory of the Body Donors,” Covert Press. She has received several honors, including a 2008 grant for poetry from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts.
Sara Whitestone is a writer, photographer, and teacher. In exchange for instruction in English, her international students introduce her to the mysteries of the world. Whitestone works have appeared, or are forthcoming, in Prime Numbers Magazine, Winchester Life, The Piedmont Virginian, Summerset Review, North Carolina Literary Review, BootsnAll, Wilderness House Literary Review, and many others. Whitestone discovers writing through travel, and her current work-in-progress is a literary thriller set in Europe that is inspired by true events. Discover more on her website.
Matthew Williams recently took a two month tour of many European countries. During that time he wrote a small but strong collection of poems. He currently resides in western New York State and recently received a BA in psychology.
Laura Winton is a poet and theatre artist, who sometimes also writes prose, including short stories. Her work has been published in the US and the UK over the past 25 years and she herself published the journal Karawane: Or, the Temporary Death of the Bruistist, a journal devoted to experimental writers who also perform their work. She also published at one time the Hairy-Legged Man-Hating Feminist Gazette, which she assumes needs no further explanation.
Wolfgang Wright is a novelist, short story writer, and screenwriter from North Dakota. He also stocks groceries.
Nolan Yard enjoys writing historical fiction.
Jo Ellen Aragon, a 23 year old Filipina writer, writes mostly flash fiction and short stories- though, she is currently working on a young adult novel. She graduated from California State University-Northridge in 2007 with a BA in English.
Jon Beight lives and works in Western New York. He has been published in Red Fez, Apocrypha and Abstractions, Spilling Ink Review, First Stop Fiction, and other fine publications.
Carly Berg is a pen name who wonders why the other name is paraded about in public while she is kept to the side like a dirty little secret. Her stories appear in several dozen magazines and anthologies, including PANK, Word Riot, and Bartleby Snopes.
Joshua Berida lives and writes in the Philippines. He sidelines as an adventurer looking for some place to wander in, and masquerades as a writer to create new worlds. He writes down his wanderings in The Wandering Juan.
Aaron Brand's poetry has appeared in StringTown, Mad Swirl, Nebo: A Literary Journal and Firebush: Journal of Poetry. A graduate of the M.F.A. program at Eastern Washington University, he is an arts and entertainment features reporter at the Texarkana Gazette newspaper in Texarkana, Texas.
Graeme Brasher is an Australian teacher of English, Theory of Knowledge and Chinese at an international school in Hong Kong. He writes sporadically for the sheer pleasure of words and sounds and in pursuit of clarity about issues and experiences that vex or inspire him.
Heather Cadenhead resides with her husband and son in Franklin, Tennessee. Her work has appeared in Ruminate, Relief, Birmingham Arts Journal, Blue Earth Review, Valley Voices, and other journals. She is the author of two chapbooks, Inventory of Sleeping Things (Maverick Duck Press, 2010) and The Education of a Girl (Maverick Duck Press, 2011). Previously, Heather worked in the publishing industry.
Jennifer Chow, an Asian-American writer, lives near Los Angeles. Her short fiction has appeared in IdeaGems Magazine. She also received finalist standing in Writer Advice’s Flash Prose Contest and an honorable mention in the Whispering Prairie Press Writers Contest. Fortune cookie wisdom meets her life on her blog.
Andrew Davis is a full-time college student who majors in Criminal Justice. He is a brother of Tau Kappa Epsilon and enjoys being with friends and family and enjoys capturing those moments with photography.
Spenser Davis is both an actor and playwright currently living in Chicago, where he has taken part in over thirty-five productions with theater companies across Illinois, Arkansas, Missouri, and Iowa. On the writing front, his plays have been produced across North America, (most recently in Canada). In Chicago , his work has been featured in venues such as the American Theater Company, the Chicago Dramatists, and The Second City. His short play Minimalistic Men was named one of “The Best Ten-Minute Plays of 2012” by New York's Smith & Kraus. He graduated from the University of Illinois with a Bachelor's in Creative Writing. He currently serves as the Literary Manager for both production companies: Hobo Junction Productions and Broken Nose Theater.
Otha “Vakseen” Davis III has had a month and a half solo exhibition at the Emerging Art Scene Gallery in Atlanta; and showcased his art at Los Angeles’ Noho Art Gallery, Norbertellen Gallery, Stay Gallery, The Key Club, Media Temple Studios, The Alexandria Hotel, M. Bird Salon, The Holding Co. Studios, Opulen Studios and the Rochester Art House, amongst others. His work has also been featured in Artnois Magazine, Cactus Heart Literary Magazine, Barely South Review, Penduline Press Magazine and Snax Magazine, to name a few. Learn more about Otha here.
Robert Demaree is the author of four collections of poems, including Fathers and Teachers (2007) and Mileposts (2009), both published by Beech River Books. The winner of the 2007 Conway, N.H., Library Poetry Award, he is a retired school administrator with ties to North Carolina, Pennsylvania and New Hampshire, where he lives four months of the year. He has had over 600 poems published or accepted by 130 periodicals, including Cold Mountain Review, Foliate Oak, Red Wheelbarrow, Homestead Review and Paris/Atlantic, and in four anthologies. He lives in Burlington, N.C. and Wolfeboro, N.H. Discover more at his blog.
Isabel Brome Gaddis graduated from MIT and worked as a geophysicist at Shell, then as a writer at Microsoft. She holds four certificates in embroidery and design from City and Guilds of London. Her work was featured or is forthcoming in decomP, Forge, Grey Sparrow, New Ohio Review, and OnTheBus.
Anne Goodwin writes fiction, short and long, from flash to novels, and a blog that hovers somewhat closer to reality. She loves fiction for the freedom to contradict herself and is scared of bios for fear of getting it wrong. The portal to her writing world is through her website , or sneak a snapshot.
Pamela Hammond received her BA from UCLA and an MA in art, then continued teaching part-time at the college level. About ten years later, she created Eye International. Pamela quickly learned that she prefers writing over publishing and spent the next decade as a Los Angeles-based critic for ARTnews while serving as director of publications and public affairs at California State University, Dominguez Hills. Her poetry has been published or is forthcoming in Assisi, Forge, and two chapbooks, Clearing (2011) and Encounters (2012).
Kip Hanson lives in sunny Phoenix, where his wife makes him watch Poltergeist while insisting that clowns are not scary. You can find his work scattered about the Internet, at Foundling Review, Bartleby Snopes, Monkey Bicycle, Absinthe Revival, and a few other places, proving that a blind squirrel does occasionally find a nut. When not telling lies, he makes a few bucks by cobbling together boring manufacturing articles for technical magazines.
Richard "Rick" Hartwell is a retired middle school English teacher living in Moreno Valley, California. He believes in the succinct, that the small becomes large; and, like the Transcendentalists and William Blake, that the instant contains eternity. Given his “druthers,” if he’s not writing poetry, Rick would rather still be tailing plywood in a mill in Oregon.
William Ogden Haynes is a poet and author of short fiction from Alabama who was born in Michigan and grew up a military brat. His book of poetry entitled Points of Interest appeared in 2012. He has published nearly forty poems and short stories in literary journals and his work has been anthologized multiple times. In a prior life he taught speech-language pathology at Auburn University and authored six major professional textbooks.
Martin Kiel, since retirement, has revisited his interest in literature, particularly poetry, and has participated actively in poetry writer’s workshops and local writer’s groups. He also enjoys painting, wood and stone carving, astronomy, and camping with his family in their small motor-home.
Anthony J. Langford lives in Sydney Australia. He writes stories, poetry and makes video poems. Some of his recent publications include Ink, Sweat & Tears, Mused, Citizens for Decent Literature, Crack the Spine and Eunoia Review. He works in television and has made short films, some of which have screened internationally. His novella, Bottomless River is out now through Ginninderra Press. A poetry collection, Caged without Walls, will be released in 2013. Learn more about Anthony here.
Jeremy Levine is currently a sophomore at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he is the Editor-In-Chief of the student newspaper, The Scarlet.
Jennifer MacBain-Stephens is an emerging poet who was recently published in Issue #10 of Superstition Review and has poems forthcoming in Emerge Literary Journal and Red Savina Review. She has also written three YA non-fiction books and currently lives in Iowa City, IA and works at a journal.
Brady Mueller is currently a student at Gustavus Adolphus College, studying fiction and theater. He loves to write, and hopes to give more of his voice to the world.
Brandon Meyers is the co-author of the novels Dead and Moaning in Las Vegas, The Missing Link, and The Sensationally Absurd Life and Times of Slim Dyson. He is also the co-author of the popular humor web-comic A Beer for the Shower.
Devon Newhouse is a native of Los Angeles living in Boston, where she studies history. When she is not researching and writing about actual events, she makes it up and calls it fiction.
Irene O'Garden's writing has found its way to the Off-Broadway stage (Women On Fire, Samuel French), into hardcover (Fat Girl, Harper) into prizewinning children’s books and into many literary journals and anthologies. She won a 2012 Pushcart Prize for her essay “Glad To Be Human.” Discover more at her blog.
Richard Ong's painted artwork, stories, poetry and photos have appeared in several issues of bewilderingstories.com, yesterdaysmagazette.com and The Blotter Magazine. One of these stories has been republished in print as part of an anthology titled, “Toys Remembered.” (compiled and edited by Madonna Dries Christensen).
Lisa Pellegrini resides in Warrington, PA. Her poetry has appeared in Zouch Magazine, Downer Magazine, The Rainbow Rose, and Misfits' Miscellany. She has forthcoming work appearing in Eunoia Review, Bolts of Silk, The Lascaux Review, The Rusty Nail, and other publications.
Richard King Perkins II is a state-sponsored advocate for residents in long-term care facilities. He has a wife, Vickie and a daughter, Sage. His work has appeared in hundreds of publications including Prime Mincer, Sheepshead Review, Sierra Nevada Review, Fox Cry, Prairie Winds and The Red Cedar Review.
Brenn Roorda is an aspiring writer from Iowa.
Robert Rothman lives in Northern California, near extensive trails and open space, with the Pacific Ocean over the hill. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Alembic, Cold Mountain Review, Diverse Voices Quarterly, Front Range Review, Grey Sparrow, The Griffin, Mary: A Journal of New Writing, Pank Magazine, RiverSedge, and the Meridian Anthology of Contemporary Poetry.
Wayne Scheer has published stories, poems and essays both in print and online, including Revealing Moments, a collection of flash stories, published by Thumbscrews Press. Wayne lives in Atlanta with his wife.
Frank Scozzari's fiction has previously appeared in various literary magazines, including The Kenyon Review, South Dakota Review, Folio, The Nassau Review, Roanoke Review, Pacific Review, Reed Magazine, Ellipsis Magazine, Sycamore Review, Eureka Literary Magazine, The MacGuffin, Foliate Oak, Hawai’i Pacific Review, Chrysalis Reader, and many others.
Caryl Sills is a retired English professor who has turned her hand to fiction after many years of writing essays and literary criticism. Her short stories have been published in print and online, including First Edition, Mobius, Blue Lake Review, and Black Fox Literary Magazine, among others. I am currently working on a novel that explores the post-war politics, prejudices, fears, and optimism of American society in 1948.
Suzanne J. Sprague, originally from Bad Axe, MI, is a full-time librarian and part-time author in Daytona Beach, FL, who occasionally reviews books for the Historical Novel Society. Suzanne holds degrees in literature and in library science.
Louis Staeble lives in Bowling Green, Ohio. He has had photographs appear in Trigger, Camera Obscura, This Literary Magazine, OVS and The Fine Line. His "Industrial Strength Nation" was a part of the 93rd Toledo Area Artists Exhibition, The Toledo Museum of Art. A few of his pictures are available on Etsy.
Matthew A. Taub is a writer and lawyer living in Brooklyn, NY. His work has previously appeared in Absinthe Revival and The Weekenders Magazine. He is currently working on his first novel, Death of a Dying City, a panorama of New York City's rapid gentrification and multiple ethnic enclaves through rotating character-driven vignettes, all of which are connected by an imperiled lawyer-protagonist.
Jacob Valadez is an aspiring writer from California. He currently attends UC San Diego, located in La Jolla, CA, where he is studying as an undergraduate. Mr Valadez enjoys working with form and conceptual poetry, while also not being constrained by either.
Clay Waters has had short stories published in The Santa Barbara Review, Liquid Ohio, Abyss & Apex, and Three-Lobe Burning Eye.
Kelley White has been widely published since 2000 in journals including Exquisite Corpse, Friends Journal, Nimrod, Poet Lore, Rattle, the Journal of the American Medical Association, and in a number of chapbooks and full-length collections, most recently Toxic Environment from Boston Poet Press, Two Birds in Flame, poems related to the Shaker Community at Canterbury, NH, from Beech River Books, and “In Memory of the Body Donors,” Covert Press. She has received several honors, including a 2008 grant for poetry from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts.
Sara Whitestone is a writer, photographer, and teacher. In exchange for instruction in English, her international students introduce her to the mysteries of the world. Whitestone works have appeared, or are forthcoming, in Prime Numbers Magazine, Winchester Life, The Piedmont Virginian, Summerset Review, North Carolina Literary Review, BootsnAll, Wilderness House Literary Review, and many others. Whitestone discovers writing through travel, and her current work-in-progress is a literary thriller set in Europe that is inspired by true events. Discover more on her website.
Matthew Williams recently took a two month tour of many European countries. During that time he wrote a small but strong collection of poems. He currently resides in western New York State and recently received a BA in psychology.
Laura Winton is a poet and theatre artist, who sometimes also writes prose, including short stories. Her work has been published in the US and the UK over the past 25 years and she herself published the journal Karawane: Or, the Temporary Death of the Bruistist, a journal devoted to experimental writers who also perform their work. She also published at one time the Hairy-Legged Man-Hating Feminist Gazette, which she assumes needs no further explanation.
Wolfgang Wright is a novelist, short story writer, and screenwriter from North Dakota. He also stocks groceries.
Nolan Yard enjoys writing historical fiction.