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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.

Richard Burgin’s sixteenth book, Hyde Island: A Novella and Ten Stories, will be published next October by Texas Review Press. His stories have won five Pushcart Prizes and been reprinted in The Best American Mystery Stories and The Ecco Anthology of Contemporary American Short Fiction, among others. He is the founder and editor of Boulevard magazine.

Olivia Clare’s short stories are forthcoming in Ecotone and The Kenyon Review. Her poems have appeared in Poetry, The London Magazine, Southern Review, and elsewhere. In 2011 she was awarded the Ruth Lilly Fellowship by the Poetry Foundation. She edits The Winter Anthology.

William Virgil Davis’s most recent book of poetry, Landscape and Journey, won the 2009 New Criterion Poetry Prize and the 2010 Helen C. Smith Memorial Poetry Award. He is the author of three other books of poetry, including One Way to Reconstruct the Scene, which won the Yale Series of Younger Poets Prize.

R. L. Friedman is a freelance writer living in New York City and an advisory editor of The Hopkins Review.

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.

John Meredith Hill lives in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, and Provincetown, Massachusetts. He teaches at the University of Scranton.

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. [End Page 285]

Stephen Kampa has poems published or forthcoming in The Yale Review, Tampa Review, Cinncinnati Review, Subtropics, and other journals. His first book, Cracks in the Invisible, won the 2010 Hollis Summers Poetry Prize and the 2011 gold medal in poetry from the Florida Book Awards. He teaches at Flagler College and also works as a musician.

John Mcneil is an artist and educator who currently works in the Photography Department of the Maryland Institute College of Art. His work was exhibited at the Baltimore Museum of Art in the 2012 Sondheim Prize Exhition.

John Menaghan has published three books of poetry with Salmon Poetry (Ireland): All the Money in the World 1999, She Alone 2006, and What Vanishes 2009. His fourth book, Here and Gone, is forthcoming from Salmon. Four of his short plays have been produced in Los Angeles and one in Omaha. Menaghan teaches literature and creative writing at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, where he also serves as director of both the Irish Studies and Summer in Ireland programs.

Maggie Murray is a writer living in Los Angeles.

Rosanna Oh is a poet living in Baltimore and an editorial assistant on The Hopkins Review.

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 spent fall 2012 in London, where he’s reporting on the dance scene for The Hopkins Review.

Mary Jo Salter’s latest collection of poems, Nothing by Design, will be published by Knopf in 2013. She is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins.

Barry Spacks has taught writing and literature for many years at M.I.T. and the University of California, Santa Barbara. He has published both poems and stories in periodicals, as well as two novels...

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