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  • Contributors

T. Alan Broughton, a recipient of a Guggenheim fellowship and NEA award, has published novels, poems, and stories. His seventh collection of poems is A World Remembered (2010).

Cally Conan-Davies studied in Melbourne, Australia, before moving to the United States in 2012. Her poems have appeared in numerous periodicals including Poetry, the New Criterion, and the Hudson Review.

William E. Engel's most recent book is devoted to Melville's and Poe's debts to early modern literature and art.

Adrian Frazier is a professor of English at the National University of Ireland, Galway.

Brendan Galvin is the author of sixteen collections of poems including Habitat: New and Selected Poems 1965-2005 (LSU Press) and "The Air's Accomplices," a collection of new poems forthcoming from LSU.

Debora Greger's most recent book of poems is By Herself (Penguin, 2012). She is poet-in-residence at the Harn Museum of Art in Gainesville, Florida.

Pamela Gross's first poetry collection, Birds of the Night Sky / Stars of the Field, was published by the University of Georgia Press.

William Harmon, the Hanes Professor, emeritus, in the humanities at UNC Chapel Hill, is now in his fifth decade as a contributor to the Sewanee Review.

Henry Hart has completed a new poetry manuscript, "Orpheus Among Familiar Ghosts," and is writing a biography of Robert Frost and a novel.

David Heddendorf of Ames, Iowa, writes regularly for the SR.

A longtime contributor to the SR, the poet and essayist Ben Howard is the author of eight books, including the poetry collection Leaf, Sunlight, Asphalt (2009).

Marc Hudson teaches at Wabash College. His Beowulf: A Translation and Commentary was reissued in 2007.

Samuel Hynes, a former advisory editor, has played tennis regularly for more than seventy years, the last ten by Keeley Rules. He is finishing a book about World War I pilots.

Lawrence Kessenich won the 2010 Strokestown International Poetry Prize. His poetry has been published in Atlanta Review, Poetry Ireland Review, Cream City Review, and elsewhere.

Warren Leamon has published poetry, fiction, and criticism in various periodicals and has taught English literature at colleges and universities in the U.S. and Japan.

Clay Lewis has been writing on the Civil War for the SR for more than twenty years.

Mel Livatino has been contributing essays to the SR since 2004.

Pamela Royston Macfie is a professor of English at Sewanee, where she holds the Samuel R. Williamson chair.

David Mason's latest books are Two Minds of a Western Poet (essays) and The Scarlet Libretto, written for Lori Laitman's opera based on Hawthorne's novel.

Jerome Mazzaro's most recent poems have appeared in the Southwest Review. He is a poet and critic whose latest collection is Dream Catchers (2008).

Jeffrey Meyers has recently published his fifth work on Orwell, George Orwell: Life and Art (2010), followed by John Huston: Courage and Art (2011).

George Monteiro's most recent book is Elizabeth Bishop in Brazil and After (2012).

Sam Pickering is retiring from teaching English at the University of Connecticut. Next fall the Mercer University Press will publish a new collection of his essays.

Dawn Potter is the author of three collections of poetry, most recently How the Crimes Happened (2010).

A retired professor of English at Yale, Fred C. Robinson taught mainly Old English and the history of English. He's now working on a history of printing in England.

Floyd Skloot recently completed [End Page xlvii] "Revertigo: An Off-Kilter Memoir" and "Approaching Winter," a collection of poems.

Frederick Turner, a past coeditor of the Kenyon Review, has recently published Epic: Form, Content, History (2012).

George Watson, a fellow at St. John's College, Cambridge, is the author of The Lost Literature of Socialism and Take Back the Past. [End Page xlviii]

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