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  • Notes on Contributors

Daniel Anderson's work has appeared in Poetry, The Kenyon Review, New England Review, The Yale Review, The Hudson Review, Harper's, The New Republic, The Southern Review, The Sewanee Review, The Best American Poetry and Southwest Review among other places. He has published two books of poetry, Drunk in Sunlight (Johns Hopkins University Press) and January Rain (Story Line Press), and edited The Selected Poems of Howard Nemerov (Swallow Press/Ohio University Press). His honors include a Pushcart Prize as well as fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Bogliasco Foundation. He teaches in the Creative Writing Program at the University of Oregon.

Anders V. Borge received his Master of Music in musicology from the Peabody Conservatory and focused his graduate study on the power of music in a variety of socio-political contexts. He lives in New York City.

Jackson R. Bryer is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Maryland and the author, editor or co-editor of numerous books on twentieth-century American literature, most recently Approaches to Teaching Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby and The Selected Letters of Thornton Wilder.

Tracy Daugherty is the author of biographies of Joseph Heller and Donald Barthelme, as well as of eight books of fiction. He is Distinguished Professor of English at Oregon State University.

Castle Freeman Jr.'s stories have been published or are forthcoming in New England Review, The Idaho Review, and Alaska Quarterly Review, as well as in The Hopkins Review (Spring 2011). A collection of his stories, Round Mountain, was published earlier in 2012 by the Concord Free Press, Concord, Massachusetts.

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.

Steven Harvey is the author of three books of personal essays, A Geometry of Lilies, Lost in Translation, and Bound for Shady Grove. He has also edited an anthology of essays written by men on middle age called In a Dark Wood. He is a professor of English and creative writing at Young Harris College as well as a member of the nonfiction faculty in the Ashland University MFA program in creative writing. He lives in the north Georgia mountains.

Jesse Hellman is a psychiatrist in Towson, Maryland, who has done backstage and theater photography for over two decades. For the last two years he [End Page 139] has photographed Opera Camp, a program for area teenagers, for Lyric Opera Baltimore.

Jefferson Hunter, The Hopkins Review's film critic, is the Helen and Laura Sledd Professor of English and Film Studies at Smith College. His book English Filming, English Writing was published by Indiana University Press in 2010.

Charles Martin's most recent books are Signs and Wonders, a collection of poems, and a verse translation of The Bhagavad Gita, done in collaboration with Gavin Flood.

Brent Newsom has published poems in The Southern Review, Best New Poets of 2010, Subtropics, Cave Wall, and elsewhere. He received a Fulbright Fellowship to China for a novel in progress and is a former managing editor of Iron Horse Literary Review. Currently he teaches literature and writing at Oklahoma Baptist University.

Jay Rogoff writes about dance for The Hopkins Review and Ballet Review. He has published four books of poems, most recently, The Art of Gravity (LSU 2011). LSU will bring out his new collection, Venera, 2014. He teaches at Skidmore College and is spending fall 2012 in London, where he plans to report on the dance scene for The Hopkins Review.

Michael Spence has now driven public transit buses in the Seattle area for twenty-eight years. His poems have appeared recently in The Gettysburg Review, The Hudson Review, The Sewanee Review, and The Southern Review, and are forthcoming in The New Criterion, Tampa Review, and Tar River Poetry. His latest book is Crush Depth (Truman State University Press).

Anne-Marie Thompson teaches at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri. Recent work appears in Southwest Review, The Southeast Review, American Literary Review, and elsewhere. Here manuscript, Audiation, won the 2013 Donald Justice Prize and...

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