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  • Contributors

Ann E. Berthoff has written reviews and essays for the SR for many years. In 2007 she earned the Heilman prize for her book-reviewing.

James S. Brown previously published an essay in the SR—“Cold Black Water.” He has another reminiscence coming up next year.

Derek Cohen is best known for his work on Shakespeare. His last essay in the Sewanee Review was devoted to his father.

Emanuel di Pasquale has been publishing poetry in the SR since 1974.

Debora Greger’s latest collection of poetry is Men, Women, and Ghosts from Penguin.

Pat C. Hoy II continues to direct the expository writing program at NYU. He has been writing essays and reviews for this magazine since 1985.

Robert C. Jones taught in the department of English and philosophy at the University of Central Missouri for thirty years. His most recent collection of poetry is Two-and Three-Part Inventions: New and Selected Poems.

Robert Lacy is a frequent contributor to the Sewanee Review. Over the past twenty-five years his essays and short fiction have appeared in numerous magazines and journals.

Mairi MacInnes is a woman of letters who has contributed essays, poetry, reviews, and fiction to this magazine.

John Martin has published poetry in the New Oxford Review, First Things, Chronicles, and the Chesterton Review, as well as previously in the SR.

David Middleton has recently retired from Nicholls State University. He is the poetry editor of Modern Age.

Richard O’Mara has regularly written essays and reviews for the SR for the past ten years.

Edward Pickering is completing his graduate work at Yale. Like Derek Cohen and Richard O’Mara, he contributed an essay to our last issue devoted to the literature of travel (summer 2007).

Sam Pickering taught in the School of Letters at the University of the South this past summer. His latest book is A Comfortable Boy.

Leslie Richardson, a previous contributor, teaches Italian at the University of the South.

Earl Rovit continues to live and write in Manhattan. He is a novelist and critic who has written for this magazine since 1985.

Gladys Swan has contributed poetry and fiction to this magazine since 1981.

Seymour I. Toll practices law in Philadelphia. He has published essays on Gertrude Stein and on Hemingway and Liebling in Paris in these pages.

George Watson is a fellow of St. John’s College, Cambridge, and author of The Lost Literature of Socialism, Never Ones for Theory?, Take Back the Past, and The Story of the Novel.

The Allen Tate Poetry Prize

for the finest poetry published

in this magazine in 2010

is being awarded to

Debora Greger

for “The Way Water Does” and

“At Summer’s End, Persephone”

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