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  • Notes on Contributors

JAMES ARTHUR is the author of Charms Against Lightning (Copper Canyon, 2012). He has received the Amy Lowell Travelling Poetry Scholarship, a Hodder Fellowship, a Stegner Fellowship, a Fulbright Scholarship, and a Visiting Fellowship at Exeter College, Oxford. Arthur is an assistant professor in the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University.

ERIC BERLIN's poems appear in journals such as Hunger Mountain, Jewish Currents, The Poetry Review, and The White Review, and have won the University of Canberra Vice-Chancellor's International Poetry Prize, Bradford on Avon Poetry Prize, National Poetry Prize and The Ledge Poetry Prize. Assistant editor for The Cortland Review, he lives in Central New York.

BRIAN BRODEUR is the author of five poetry collections, including Self-Portrait with Alternative Facts (2019) and the chapbook Local Fauna (2015). He teaches at Indiana University East.

MICHAEL BROWN JR. is a poet from the Bronx. His poems have been published in journals such as Beloit Poetry Journal, American Chordata, and SAND Journal.

GEORGE DAVID CLARK's first book, Reveille, won the 2015 Miller Williams Prize, and his more recent work can be found in Agni, The Georgia Review, The Gettysburg Review, The Southern Review, and elsewhere. He edits 32 Poems and lives with his wife and their four young children in Washington, Pennsylvania.

RACHEL HADAS's translations of Euripides's two Iphigenia plays were published in June by Northwestern University Press, and her newest collection of verse, Poems for Camilla, will be published by Measure Press in September. She is Board of Governors Professor of English at Rutgers-Newark, where she has taught for many years.

REBECCA HAZELTON is the author of Fair Copy, from Ohio State UP, and Vow, from Cleveland State UP. Her poems have been published in The New Yorker, Poetry, Best American, and the Pushcart anthology.

TED HENDRICKS teaches dramatic literature at Towson University, Stevenson University, and the University of Maryland. He has presented conference papers on Sophocles's Oedipus Tyrannos, Shakespeare's Othello, and the plays of August Wilson. He is currently working on a critical biography of Stephen Dixon.

ERNEST HILBERT lives in Philadelphia, where he works as a rare book dealer, opera librettist, and book reviewer. His most recent collection of poetry is Caligulan (2015).

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 current project is a critical and comparative study of six directors: F. W. Murnau, Anthony Asquith, Rouben Mamoulian, Dimitri Kirsanoff, Alberto Cavalcanti, and Dziga Vertov.

Physician and educator JENNA LE (jennalewriting.com) authored Six Rivers (NYQ Books, 2011) and A History of the Cetacean American Diaspora (Indolent Books 2018; first edition published by Anchor & Plume, 2016), which won second place in the 2017 Elgin Awards. Her poetry appears in Denver Quarterly, Los Angeles Review, West Branch, and elsewhere.

CHARLES MARTIN's most recent book of poems, Future Perfect, was published this spring by The Johns Hopkins University Press.

JEAN McGARRY translated a very long contract on mustard when French owners were selling the company to the United States. She has published nine works of fiction and teaches in the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins.

MICHAEL MINGO received his MFA in poetry from the Johns Hopkins Writing Seminars. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Spillway, Harpur Palate, Tar River Poetry, and Valparaiso Poetry Review, among other journals. He originally hails from Vernon Township, New Jersey.

ANGIE PELEKIDIS holds a PhD in creative writing from Binghamton University, where she won the Distinguished Dissertation Award. Her writing has appeared in The Michigan Quarterly Review, McSweeney's, The Masters Review, North Dakota Quarterly, Confrontation, and elsewhere. Ann Beattie once selected a story of hers as a contest winner.

WILLIAM H. PRITCHARD is Professor of English Emeritus at Amherst College. He has a forthcoming book of library essays and reviews titled In Search of Humor.

JAY ROGOFF has been THR's dance critic since 2009. He has also written on dance for Ballet Review, The Georgia Review, The Kenyon Review, Playbill, The Southern Review, and other publications. His sixth book of poems, Enamel Eyes, A Fantasia on Paris, 1870, appeared from...

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