CHRISTIAN BARTER was born and raised in rural Maine. He received a B.A. from Bates College, in music composition, and an M.F.A in Writing from Vermont College. He supervises a trail crew in Bar Harbor, Maine, doing dry stone masonry, tree work, and wild-land firefighting. Christian’s poems have appeared in a number of periodicals, including The Georgia Review, North American Review, American Scholar and Notre Dame Review. He has received residency fellowships from the Kimmel Harding Nelson Foundation and the Espy Foundation.

The Singers I Prefer

 

BHISHAM BHERWANI studied Fine Arts at New England College.  He is also a graduate of New York University and Cornell University, and the recipient of fellowships and scholarships from The Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, New England College, and The Frost Place. He was born in Bombay, India; he lives in New York City.

The Second Night of the Spirit

 

CELIA BLAND is the author of thirteen books for young readers, including the historical novel, The Conspiracy of the Secret Nine, which was a finalist for the Heckin Award for Children’s Fiction. Her poetry has been collected in anthologies published by Persea and Faber & Faber, and has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. She is a contributing editor to The New York Public Library Desk Reference, and has published articles in Poets & Writers, Forbes Best of the Web, Art & Antiques and other magazines. She lives in New York’s Hudson Valley and is Director of College Writing at Bard College.

Soft Box

 

ELOISE BRUCE has worked in all aspects of the theatre and is a teaching artist for New Jersey Writer’s Project and a middle school and high school for the arts. Her poems have appeared in numerous journals , including American Letters and Commentary, Blue Moon Review and The Paterson Literary Review, among others. She is a recipient of a Fellowship in poetry from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts and helps administrate The Frost Place Festival of Poetry in Franconia, NH. Bruce lives with her husband, the poet David Keller in Lawrenceville, NJ.

Rattle

 

ANDREA CARTER BROWN was born in Paterson, NJ. She is the author of a chapbook, Brook & Rainbow, which won the 2000 Sow’s Ear Press Competition, and her work as appeared in The Gettysburg Review, Ploughshare, Five Points, and the Mississippi Review, among other publications. Her poetry was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in 2005 and has received awards from the Poetry Society of America, the Writer’s Voice, Thin Air, River Oak Review and The MacGuffin. She won the 2004 River Styx Poetry Prize for her sonnet crown “September 12.” A longtime resident of New York City, she now lives on the west coast and is Managing Editor of The Emily Dickinson Journal at Pomona College.

The Disheveled Bed

 

TERESA CARSON grew up in Jersey City, New Jersey, as the youngest of ten in a blue-collar family. At eighteen she joined New Jersey Bell and before retiring in 2003, worked in a series of non-traditional-for-women jobs. In 2004 she earned an MFA from Sarah Lawrence College. She has never left Hudson County and now lives there with her husband John.

Elegy for the Floater

 

KAREN CHASE lives in the Berkshire Hills of Massachusetts. Her poems have appeared in many magazines, including The New Yorker, The New Republic and The Yale Review. Her collection of poems, Kazimierz Square, was short-listed by ForeWord Magazine for their 2000 Poetry Book of the Year Award. Her poems have been widely anthologized, including work in The Norton Introduction to Poetry and Billy Collins’ Poetry 180. Her non-fiction book, Land of Stone, was published by Wayne State University Press in March 2007.

Bear

Kazimierz Square

 

ROBERT CORDING teaches English and creative writing at College of the Holy Cross where he is the Barrett Professor of Creative Writing. He has published four collections of poems: Life-list, which won the Ohio State University Press/Journal award, in 1987; What Binds Us To This World (Copper Beech Press, 1991); Heavy Grace, (Alice James, 1996); and Against Consolation (CavanKerry Press, 2002) He has received two grants in poetry from the National Endowment of the Arts and two from the Connecticut Commission of the Arts. In 1992, he was poet-in-residence at The Frost Place in Franconia, New Hampshire. His poems have appeared in the Nation, Image, AGNI, Georgia Review, Kenyon Review, New England Review, Poetry, DoubleTake, Orion, Paris Review, The New Yorker and many other magazines. He lives in Woodstock, Connecticut with his wife and three children.

Common Life

Against Consolation

 

SAM CORNISH grew up in Baltimore, MD and has lived in Boston, MA for the past 35 years. Following his move to Boston, he was a teacher at the Highland Park Community School in Roxbury, MA, and was also active in the Poetry in the Schools Program in Boston and Cambridge, MA. In the early 80s, he was the Literature Director of the Massachusetts Council on the Arts and Humanities and subsequently, an instructor in Creative Writing at Emerson College until his retirement in 2006.  He has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, Massachusetts Council on the Arts and St. Botolph Society, among others. In addition to his nine books of poetry and two children’s books, he has been published in dozens of periodicals, including Essence, Ploughshares, The Harvard Review, the Christian Science Monitor and the Boston Globe. In 2007, he was chosen as the first Poet Laureate of the City of Boston.

An Apron Full of Beans: New and Selected Poems

 

MOYRA DONALDSON was a founding member of the Creative Writers’ Network and is Literary Editor for Fortnight magazine. In addition to Snakeskin Stilettos, her collections of poetry include Kissing Ghosts and Beneath the Ice. She has produced four stage plays, and her screenplay “h” was filmed in Belfast, Northern Ireland, where she graduated in English Language and Literature from Queens University. She also qualified as a social worker and studied social welfare law, which led to another career in welfare and education. Literary honors include the National Women’s Poetry Competition and the Allingham Award. Born in County Down, Northern Ireland, she now lives in Newtownards with her husband John Liddle and daughters Claire and Jannah.

Snakeskin Stilettos

 

CATHERINE DOTY is the recipient of the 2003 Marjorie J. Wilson Award, an Academy of American Poets Award, and fellowships from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts and the New York Foundation for the Arts. She was born and raised in Garrett Mountain in Paterson, NJ and has taught thereabouts for many years.

Momentum

 

SHERRY FAIRCHOK was born in Scranton in1962. She spent the early part of her childhood in Taylor, PA, a coal-mining town, in which her family has lived since the 1880s, and where her grandfather, great-uncles, and great –grandfather worked as miners. She earned a bachelor’s degree from Syracuse University and an M.F. A. degree from Sarah Lawrence college. Her chapbook, A Stone that Burns, won the Ledge 1999 Chapbook Award. Her poems have appeared in the Southern Review, Ploughshares, DoubleTake, and Poetry Northwest, among other journals. She works as an information technology editor and lives in Mount Vernon, NY.

The Palace of Ashes

 

SONDRA GASH grew up in Paterson, NJ. Her poems have appeared in The New York Times, Calyx, The Paterson Literary Review, and U.S. 1 Worksheets. She has received grants from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts and the Corporation of Yaddo, and won first prize in the Allen Ginsberg Poetry Competition. In 1999, the Geraldine Dodge Foundation awarded her a fellowship to the Virginia Center for the Arts. She lives with her husband in New Jersey, where she teaches writing and directs the poetry program at the Women’s Resource Center in Summit.

Silk Elegy

 

ROSS GAY was born in Youngstown, Ohio and grew up outside of Philadelphia. His poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, Harvard Review, and Atlanta Review, among other journals. Ross is a Cave Canem fellow and has been a Breadloaf Tuition Scholar. In addition to holding a Ph.D in American Literature from Temple University, he is a basketball coach, an occasional demolition man, a painter, and a faculty member at New England College's Low-Residency MFA program.

Against Which

 

Bronx native JOAN CUSACK HANDLER’s first poetry collection, Glorious, debuted in 2003 and was hailed as “an open field verse bildungsroman of adulthood” by Publishers Weekly. Its companion CD was produced in 2007. Recipient of four Pushcart nominations and The Sampler Award from The Boston Review, her poems have appeared in Agni, The New York Times, Poetry East and Seattle Review. She’s Founder/Publisher of CavanKerry Press and a clinical psychologist and lives in Fort Lee, NJ and East Hampton, NY with her husband, Alan, a retired psychologist. Their one son, David, is co-founder of (Le) Poisson Rouge, a music/ arts venue at the former Village Gate in NYC.

Glorious
Red Canoe: Love In Its Making

 

ELIZABETH HALL HUTNER is a writer, scholar and musician living in Princeton, N.J., where she is completing her Ph.D. in Comparative Literature at Princeton University. Most recently, she has written short essays which have been published in A Real Life, a bimonthly magazine. Hutner graduated from Yale University, where she studied with Mark Strand and J.D. McClatchy, and she worked with Marvin Bell at the Breadloaf Writer’s Conference. She also holds an M.A. from Princeton.

Life With Sam

 

SUSAN JACKSON serves on the Board of Directors of Poets & Writers, Inc.,and the National Arts Club Literary Committee. Before moving to New Jersey, she lived in France, Belgium, Portugal and Holland. She has received a fellowship grant from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts and a Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation residency grant to attend the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. Her work has been published in literary journals such as NIMROD and the Paterson Literary Review.

Through A Gate of Trees

 

CHRISTINE KORFHAGE was born in Albany, NY and grew up overseas. A former artisan and juried member of the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen, she began writing poetry at age 49. Returning to school after three decades, in 1999 she received her B.A. from Vermont College’s Adult Degree Program where she was awarded a Fellowship for Excellence in Creative Writing. She received her M.F.A. from Bennington College in 2001. Her poems have appeared in many journals, including Chiron Review, Connecticut River Review, Nimrod International Review, Paterson Literary Review, Pearl, Red Rock Review and The Spoon River Poetry Review. A mother and grandmother, Christine lives in New Hampshire.

We Aren't Who We Are and this world isn't either

 

LAURIE LAMON has taught poetry workshops and literature seminars at Whitworth College in Spokane, WA, sicne 1985, after receiving her doctorate from the University of Utah. Her poems has appeared in many journals and magazines, including The Atlantic Monthly, The New Republic, The New Criterion, Arts & Letters Journal of Contemporary Culture, Ploughshares, Colorado Review, and Poetry Northwest. She is the recipient of a Graves Award in 2002, and a Pushcart Prize in 2001 for the poem “Pain Thinks of the Beautiful Table.” Twelve of the Pain Poems—an ongoing cycle of poems whose subjects include history, religion, loss, and survival—are included in her first collection. She lives with her husband, William Siems.

The Fork Without Hunger

 

JOSEPH O. LEGASPI spent his childhood in the Philippines and immigrated with his family to Los Angeles when he was twelve. He holds degrees from Loyola Marymount University and the Creative Writing Program at New York University.  He lives in New York City and works at Columbia University.  A recipient of a 2001 poetry fellowship from the New York Foundation for the Arts, he is a co-founder of Kundiman (www.kundiman.org), a non-profit organization serving Asian American poets.

Imago

 

HOWARD LEVY has been a teacher in museums and schools in New York and now works in business. He was the recipient of a New York State Creative Artists Public Service Award in Poetry and his poems have appeared in numerous journals, including Poetry, The American Poetry Review, The Paris Review and The Threepenny Review. He has been a member of the resident faculty at The Frost Place Poetry Festival. He lives in New York with his wife and two sons.

A Day This Lit

 

CHRISTOPHER MATTHEWS was born in Donegal, Ireland and grew up and was educated between that country and England. He took his bachelor’s degree at the University of Ulster and obtained a PH.D from the University of Durham: its subject was Ezra Pound.  His poems have appeared in The American Scholar, Crazyhorse, The Dublin Review and other journals. He currently teaches literature to undergraduates in Lugano, Switzerland.

Eyelevel

 

MARTIN MOONEY’s poetry, short fiction, reviews, criticism and cultural commentary have been published in Irish and British periodicals. Following Grub, which on its original release in Ireland won the Brendan Behand Memorial Award, Mooney published Bonfire Makers, Operation Sandcastle, and Rasputin and His Children. His poems have appeared in Field and The Gettsyburg Review.  He was writer-in-residence as the Brighton Festival and the Aspects Festival of Irish Writing, and twice was appointed a member of the resident faculty at The Robert Frost Place Poetry Festival in Franconia, NH.

Grub

 

MARK NEPO has taught in the fields of poetry and spirituality for over thirty years. Nominated for the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize, he is the author of thirteen books. His work has been translated into French, Portuguese, Japanese and Danish. As a cancer survivor, Mark is committed to the usefulness of daily inner life. Through both his writing and teaching, he remains devoted to the life of inner transformation and relationship. For eighteen years, Mark taught at the State University of New York at Albany. He now serves as a Program Officer for the Fetzer Institute in Kalamazoo, MI. In his spare time, Nepo tinkers at the piano, loves baseball and jazz and life, and winter walks with his wife, Susan and their dog, Mira.

Surviving Has Made Me Crazy

 

RICHARD JEFFREY NEWMAN, an Associate Professor at Nassau Community College, New York, is an essayist, poet and translator who has been publishing his work since 1988, when the essay “His Sexuality; Her Reproductive Rights” appeared in Changing Men magazine. Since then, his essays, poems and translations have appeared in a wide range of journals, among them Prairie Schooner and Birmingham Poetry Review. He has given talks and led workshops on writing autobiographically about gender, sex and sexuality. His first book of translations, Selections from Saadi’s Gulistan, was published by Global Scholarly Publications.

The Silence of Men

 

GEORGIANNA ORSINI attended Wellesley College and Harvard University and received her B.A. degree from Columbia University, during which time she worked as a Program Coordinator at International House. She has lived in Tuscany and New York. Her gardens have been featured in House and Garden, House Beautiful and American Women’s Garden. At present, she lives in the mountains of North Carolina where she continues to make gardens.

An Imperfect Lover

 

PEGGY PENN is at The Ackerman Institute for the Family, where she directs a project on the use of writing in chronic illness and trauma. She lectures and consults throughout the United States and Europe. She has co-authored Milan Systemic Family Therapy: Conversations in Theory and Practice. Her poetry is published in numerous journals, and she is currently writing a book on the creativity of writing psychotherapy. She is married to Arthur Penn, and they have two children and four grandchildren.

So Close

 

KENNETH ROSEN was born in Boston, and has lived in Maine since 1965. He recently taught at the American University in Bulgaria, and as a Fulbright professor at Sofia University. Whole Horse, his first collection, was selected for Richard Howard’s Braziller Poetry Series. Others are The Hebrew Lion, Black Leaves, Longfellow Square, Reptile Mind, and No Snake, No Paradise. He founded the Stonecoast Writers’ Conference n 1981, and directed it for ten years.

The Origins of Tragedy & Other Poems

 

MARY RUEFLE has published six books of poetry, including Among the Musk Ox People (Carnegie Mellon, 2002). Apparition Hill was completed in 1989 in China, where she was teaching. It falls between her books, The Adamant (University of Iowa, 1989) and Cold Pluto (Carnegie Mellon, 1996). She is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Creative Fellowship, a Whiting Writers’ Award, and an Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She teaches in the MFA in Writing Program at Vermont College.

Apparition Hill

 

ROBERT SEDER was a production and lighting designer for many dance and theater companies for 20 years, working with David Gordon, Lucinda Childs, Meredith Monk, Carolyn Brown, Eric Bogosian, and Philip Glass, among others. He was a semifinalist for the Julie Harris Playwright award in 1987 with LIGHT, and wrote several other plays, produced in New York City, Madison and Boston. He also wrote novels and short stories in addition to his narrative of his first bone marrow transplant. Bob taught many writing workshops with Bard students and with adults in the Bard Continuing Studies Program and Intergenerational Seminars. He was an enthusiastic participant and teacher in the Bard College Language and Thinking Program and also offered “Writing Our Illness” workshops to the community. After undergoing a second bone marrow transplant in August 2001, he died on March 6, 2002, from multiple infections that his weakened immune system was unable to defeat.

To The Marrow

 

JOAN SELIGER SIDNEY is writer-in-residence at the University of Connecticut's Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life and Lecturer in the Department of English. She also facilitates "Writing for Your Life," an adult writing workshop. Her dream-come-true job was teaching creative writing at the Université de Grenoble, France.

Body of Diminishing Motion
Poems and a Memoir

 

JACK WILER was raised in Wenonah in south NJ. Over the years he’s been a manager for a blood distribution center, managed a senior citizen's lunch program, sold weightlifting supplies. For most of his life he’s worked in pest control and currently works with Acme Exterminating in New York City. He was editor of the magazine Long Shot for many years and has worked with the Geraldine Dodge Foundation in New Jersey as a visiting poet in the schools.  He performs his work extensively in New York and New Jersey. His work has been anthologized in Aloud, the anthology of the Nuyorican Poets Café, The Outlaw Bible of American Poetry and Bum Rush the Page.   Most recently his work was included in The Breath of Parted Lips, Vol II a collection of poems from the Frost Place from CavanKerry Press. His first book, I Have No Clue, was published by Long Shot in November of 1996.

Fun Being Me

 

BARON WORMSER is the author of seven books of poetry, a memoir, The Road Washes Out in Spring: A Poet’s Memoir of Living Off the Grid, and has co-authored two books about teaching poetry. He teaches in the Stonecoast MFA program and directs the Frost Place Conference on Poetry and Teaching in Franconia, New Hampshire. He has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. From 2000 to 2005 he served as Poet Laureate of Maine.

The Poetry of Life: Ten Stories