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  • Notes on Contributors

Amy Arthur’s poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in Iron Horse, Literary Review, Birmingham Poetry Review, Unsplendid, and elsewhere. She holds an MFA from Johns Hopkins University, where she currently teaches and serves as editorial assistant on The Hopkins Review.

Brett Beach will receive his MFA from Ohio State University in Spring 2014. His fiction appears in Hobart, The Normal School, and elsewhere. He is at work on a novel.

Carter E. Foster is Steven and Ann Ames Curator of Drawing at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City. He curated the exhibit of Edward Hopper’s drawings that ran at the Whitney from May to October 2013 and that will be exhibited at the Dallas Museum of Art from November 2013 to February 2014 and at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis from March to June 2014.

Jack L. B. Gohn, when not practicing law, is the author of a column on law and policy in the Maryland Daily Record, a theater critic for BroadwayWorld.com, and an occasional book reviewer.

Daniel Groves is the author of The Lost Boys (University of Georgia Press / VQR Poetry Series, 2010). His poems have appeared in Paris Review, Yale Review, Poetry, and elsewhere.

Joseph Harrison’s books of poetry are Someone Else’s Name (2003) and Identity Theft (2008). He is the recipient of an Academy Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and a Guggenheim Fellowship.

John Meredith Hill, a retired Peace Corps volunteer and graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, lives with his wife and their large dog in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, and Provincetown, Massachusetts.

Richie Hofmann is the recipient of a 2012 Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship. His poems have appeared in The New Yorker, Poetry, The Kenyon Review, and Ploughshares.

Edward Hopper is one of the premier American painters of the twentieth century.

Jefferson Hunter, The Hopkins Review’s film critic, is the Holden and Laura Shedd Professor of English and Film Studies at Smith College. His book English Filming, English Writing was published by Indiana University Press in 2010. [End Page 296]

Theodore Leinwand is Professor of English at the University of Maryland, College Park. Recent essays in his series on writers reading Shakespeare have appeared in The Hopkins Review (John Berryman) and New England Review (Charles Olson). His “The Shakespearean Perverse” appeared in The Yale Review in 2012.

William Logan’s most recent book of poems, Madame X, was published by Penguin in 2012. He received the Aiken Taylor Award in Modern American Poetry last spring. His next book of criticism, Guilty Knowledge, Guilty Pleasure, will be published by Columbia University Press in Spring 2014.

Sheryl L. Nelms has published fourteen volumes of poems and is the fiction / nonfiction editor of The Pen Woman Magazine. She is as well a three time nominee for the Pushcart Prize.

Alfred Nicol is the recipient of the Robert Frost Foundation Poetry Award for 2013. Nicol’s book of poetry, Elegy for Everyone, published in 2009, was chosen for the first Anita Dorn Memorial Prize. He received the 2004 Richard Wilbur Award for an earlier volume, Winter Light. His poems have appeared in Poetry, Dark Horse, The Formalist, First Things, and other journals.

Rosanna Oh, originally from Long Island, New York, now lives and writes in Madison, Wisconsin. Her work has been published in Measure, The Nashville Review, and Linebreak.

Padgett Powell’s most recent works are The Interrogative Mood and You & Me.

Jay Rogoff’s fifth book of poems, Venera, has just appeared from LSU Press. His other books include The Art of Gravity, The Long Fault, and The Cutoff, and he has new poems in Agenda, Epoch, The Hudson Review, Literary Imagination, Poetry Review, The Southern Review, and elsewhere. He teaches at Skidmore College and writes about dance for The Hopkins Review.

Steve Scafidi is the author of Sparks from a Nine-Pound Hammer, For Love of Common Words, The Cabinetmaker’s Window, and To the Bramble and the Briar.

Dennis Trudell’s Fragments in Us: Recent & Earlier Poems was published by the University of Wisconsin Press. His edited Full Court: A Literary Anthology of Basketball was published by...

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