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  • Notes on Contributors

LEANN DAVIS ALSPAUGH is managing editor of The Hedgehog Review.

GRACE ALVINO’s poems have appeared in Measure: A Review of Formal Poetry and the Chicago River Review. She is an undergraduate student at Johns Hopkins University, where she is also a tutor in the Writing Center.

MICHAEL ANDERSON is finishing a biography of the playwright Lorraine Hansberry.

AMY ARTHUR holds an MFA from Johns Hopkins University, where she serves as an editorial assistant to The Hopkins Review. Her work has appeared in Blackbird, Birmingham Poetry Review, Unsplendid, and elsewhere.

BETSY BONNER’s first book of poetry, Round Lake, will be published by Four Way Books in 2016. Her writing has appeared in The Brooklyn Quarterly, The New Criterion, The New Republic, The Paris Review, Parnassus, Poetry Daily, The Southampton Review, and elsewhere.

DANIEL BROWN’s poems have appeared in Poetry, Partisan Review, The New Criterion, Parnassus, and PN Review. His Taking the Occasion won the New Criterion Poetry Prize, and What More? has just been released by Orchises Press.

EDWARD BURNS is Professor of English at William Paterson University. He has edited editions of letters by Alice B. Toklas, Gertrude Stein and Carl Van Vechten, Gertrude Stein and Thornton Wilder, Thornton Wilder and Adaline Glasheen, and Hugh Kenner and Adaline Glasheen.

CHRIS CHILDERS has poems, essays, and translations published or forthcoming from AGNI, PN Review, [PANK], Parnassus, and elsewhere. He is currently at work on a translation of Greek and Latin lyric poetry from Archilochus to Martial, under contract with Penguin Classics.

WILLIAM VIRGIL DAVIS has published five books of poetry to date. His most recent book is The Bones Poems (2014). His Dismantlements of Silence: Poems Selected and New is forthcoming.

DENIS DONOGHUE is Emeritus University Professor and Henry James Professor of English and American Letters at New York University.

CODY ERNST’s works have appeared in and are forthcoming in Witness, Forklift: Ohio, The Minnesota Review and elsewhere. He has an MFA from The Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University. [End Page 457]

JANE GILLETTE’s short fiction has appeared in The Michigan Review, The Missouri Review, Zyzzyva, The Antigonish Review, The Yale Review, and elsewhere. She is the winner of the Lawrence Foundation Prize and an O. Henry Award.

H. L. HIX’s poetry collections include I’m Here to Learn to Dream in Your Language (Etruscan Press, 2015) and As Much As, If Not More Than (Etruscan Press, 2014). He lives in the mountain West with his partner, the poet Kate Northrop.

JEFFERSON HUNTER is The Hopkins Review’s film critic and the Helen and Laura Shedd Professor of English and Film Studies, Emeritus, at Smith College. His most recent project, for an online course, is a set of fourteen hour-long videos on the art of film.

DAVID M. KATZ’s most recent book of poems, Stanzas on Oz, was published by Dos Madres Press in March, 2015. He is also the author of Claims of Home (Dos Madres Press, 2011) and The Warrior in the Forest (House of Keys, 1982). He lives in New York City and works as a financial journalist.

V. PENELOPE PELIZZON’s second poetry collection, Whose Flesh is Flame, Whose Bone is Time, was published in 2014 (Waywiser).

JOHN POCH directs the creative writing program at Texas Tech University. His stories have recently appeared in Gray’s Sporting Journal, The Sun, and The Pinch.

JAY ROGOFF, The Hopkins Review’s dance critic, has published five books of poetry, most recently Venera (LSU Press, 2014). In 2016, LSU will publish his next collection, Enamel Eyes: A Fantasia of 1870 Paris. His recent work appears in Epoch, The Hudson Review, Literary Imagination, Salmagundi, Stand, and elsewhere. He teaches at Skidmore College.

NATALIE SHAPERO is the author of the poetry collection No Object, and her writing has appeared in The Nation, The New Republic, The New Yorker, Poetry, and elsewhere. She teaches at Tufts University and serves as an editor with the Kenyon Review.

A. E. STALLINGS is an American poet who has lived in Greece since 1999. Her translation of Hesiod’s Works and Days is forthcoming from Penguin Classics.

ARTHUR VOGELSANG’s books include Cities and Towns...

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