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  • Contributors

A. Banerjee’s essay on T. S. Eliot as an editor and publisher will be appearing next year in the SR.

R. L. Barth is the author of Deeply Dug In (poetry) and the editor of Yvor Winters’s selected letters.

Holly St. John Bergon has published poetry in Ploughshares, Terra Nova, College English, ISLE, and elsewhere.

George Bornstein is Patrides professor of literature, emeritus, at the University of Michigan. Among his recent books is an annotated facsimile of W. B. Yeats’s The Winding Stair and Other Poems.

Catharine Savage Brosman’s most recent book is Louisiana Creole Literature: A Historical Study. In the fall her latest selection of poetry, On the Old Plaza, will be published.

Matthew Burkhalter is working on a Ph.D. in history. He was an intern at the SR during 2010–11.

Charles Carlton began his career as a scholar writing about the English Renaissance. He is now completing a biography of the British field marshall Bernard Montgomery.

Michael Cavanagh, professor of English, emeritus, at Grinnell College, has published poetry in a variety of periodicals. His critical study of Seamus Heaney’s poetics, Professing Poetry, appeared in 2009.

Derek Cohen, a previous contributor, is professor of English, emeritus, at York University in Toronto. He has published two books on Shakespeare and essays in Salmagundi, Descant, and Studies in English Literature.

Robert Cooperman, a past contributor, has two recent collections of poetry—Just Drive and Little Timothy in Heaven.

Brian Culhane’s first book of poetry, The King’s Question, earned the Emily Dickinson Award from the Poetry Foundation. His new work has appeared in Parnassus, the Southwest Review, Plume, and Slate.

Margot Demopoulos has published fiction in the Massachusetts Review, Fiction International, and other magazines. She is writing a novel.

Stephen Gibson is the author of five collections of poetry, including Paradise, Frescoes, and Rorschach Art. He has earned three prizes for these books, including the Donald Justice Prize from West Chester University.

Brooke Horvath, a previous contributor of prose and poetry, teaches at Kent State University. His last book of poems is The Lecture on Dust.

Pat. C. Hoy ii, a retired colonel who was an artilleryman in the U.S. Army, is the Mellon visiting professor of English at Hendrix College. His essays on war and related subjects have appeared in this quarterly for over two decades.

Robert Lacy lives in Medicine Lake, Minnesota, with his wife. He has been a frequent contributor of essays and reviews to the SR since 2004.

Stephen Malin’s verse has been anthologized in Poetry Southeast and the Southwest Review Reader. His poetry has been published in the Antioch Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, West Branch, and many other periodicals.

John M. McCardell, Jr., has long taught the history of the American Civil War. His publications include The Idea of a Southern Nation (Allan Nevins award, 1977).

Gardner McFall is the author of two books of poetry, The Pilot’s Daughter and Russian Tortoise, as well as the librettist for the Seattle Opera’s commissioned opera Amelia (2010).

Michael Miller was first published by Andrew Lytle in these pages in 1969, and his poetry has since appeared in the Kenyon Review, Raritan, and the Yale Review. His new book of poetry, Lifelines, was recently published by Pinyon. He served in the Marine Corps during 1958–1962.

David Moolten is a physician specializing in transfusion medicine in Philadelphia. His collection of poetry Primitive Mood earned the T. S. Eliot prize from Truman State University Press in 2009.

John Rees Moore (1918–2013) professed English at Hollins College for many years and was also a coeditor and then editor of the Hollins Review. He began contributing to the SR in 1963. [End Page xxxii]

Phillip Parotti was graduated from Annapolis before spending four years on destroyers in the U.S. Navy. He then taught English at Sam Houston State University. He often writes about ancient and modern war for this quarterly.

Sanford Pinsker is an emeritus professor at Franklin and Marshall College. He lives in south Florida and continues to read and write about American literature.

Thomas Reiter’s most recent book of poems is Catchment (2009). He...

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