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  • Contributors

Ann E. Berthoff is a longtime contributor of essays and reviews to this magazine.

George Bornstein is Patrides professor of literature, emeritus, at the University of Michigan. His most recent book, The Colors of Zion, will soon be reviewed in these pages.

Peg Boyers, the executive editor of Salmagundi, is the author of two books of poetry.

Robert Buffington, a contributor to the Sewanee Review since 1974, is completing his critical biography of Allen Tate.

Fred Chappell, who has been retired from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, has been contributing poetry and prose to the SR since 1963, some of which has been reprinted in his thirty books in various modes.

Casey Clabough, author of the travel memoir The Warrior’s Path as well as four scholarly books, has his first novel in press, which will be published early next year.

Robert Cording, who teaches at the College of the Holy Cross, has published six volumes of poetry, the latest of which is Walking with Ruskin.

William E. Engel, who professes English and the humanities at Sewanee, has a new book on Melville and Poe soon to be published.

Russell Fraser’s biography of R. P. Blackmur has recently been reprinted. He is writing more essays on travel.

William Harmon, Hanes professor of English, emeritus, at the University of North Carolina, has completed The Poetry Toolkit, which will be published in 2012.

Henry Hart, author of a biography of James Dickey, among other books, is now working on a biography of Robert Frost, having just finished a new poetry manuscript, “Orpheus among Familiar Ghosts.”

Ben Howard is the author of eight books of poetry and prose. He has a special interest in Ireland and its literature.

Marc Hudson, a poet, essayist, and translator, will be reporting on translations of Beowulf for the SR in 2012.

Donald Junkins’s new novel, Half Hitch, has recently been published by Universe, and his eleventh book of poetry, “Nearing Solstice,” is now in production for publication in the fall of 2012.

Robert Lacy, a frequent contributor, has published essays and stories in Ploughshares, the Southern Review, Shenandoah, the Antioch Review, and other periodicals. He is the author of a collection of stories, The Natural Father.

Warren Leamon has taught American, English, and Anglo-Irish literature at the University of Georgia and elsewhere. His poetry and prose have appeared in the Southern Review, Western Humanities Review, and other journals and magazines. He is the author of a novel, Unheard Melodies.

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

Stephen Malin’s verse has been published in the Antioch Review, the Beloit Poetry Journal, West Branch, and other periodicals.

Christopher McDonough, a regular contributor, administers the department of classical languages at the University of the South.

Jennifer Davis Michael, professor of English at the University of the South, is the author of Blake and the City.

John Rees More, for many years the editor of the Hollins Critic and professor of English at Hollins College, has been writing poetry and prose for the SR since 1963.

Michael Mott is working on a collection of playing-card poems, some of which recently appeared in the London Magazine and Ascent.

John A. Murray has taught at many universities and institutes and has published forty-one books and earned several awards for his writing.

Dawn Potter is the author of three collections of poetry. Her critical memoir, Tracing Paradise: Two Years in Harmony with John Milton, earned the Maine Literary Award in Nonfiction in 2010.

Philip Raisor, a previous contributor, is the author of Outside Shooter: A Memoir, [End Page xviii] about his experience as a basketball player in Indiana, Kansas, and Arkansas.

Sarah Rossiter has published a novel and a collection of short stories and has written poetry and fiction for this magazine.

Earl Rovit, a novelist, critic, and memoirist, has written essays and reviews for the Sewanee Review for over three decades.

Donald Stone has taught for many years at Queens College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He is now a visiting professor at Peking University. Although he chiefly professes...

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