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  • Contributors

Creative

Levi Andalou's work has appeared or is forthcoming in Lake Effect, Spillway, Mid-American Review, South Carolina Review, BOMB, Virga Magazine, Sugar House Review, DIAGRAM, F(r)iction, Cleaver Magazine, Sonora Review, Phoebe, Ruminate, Pembroke Magazine, and Tampa Review. He was a finalist for both the 2018 Greg Grummer Poetry Award and the 2018 Puerto Del Sol Poetry Contest and was a semi- finalist for the 2018 Boulevard Emerging Poets Contest. A reading of his work was featured on the literary podcast "On the Edge." He graduated from Brown University, where he studied with C. D. Wright, Michael S. Harper, and Ange Mlinko. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area. You can read more of his work or contact him at LeviAndalou.com.

Jake Bartman's work is forthcoming in the Santa Fe Literary Review. He lives in New Mexico.

Heather Cousins lives in Madison, Georgia. She is the author of Something in the Potato Room (2009) and Freeze (2013).

Julia Kolchinsky Dasbach holds an MFA in poetry from the University of Oregon and is a PhD candidate in comparative literature at the University of Pennsylvania. Her collection The Many Names for Mother (2019) won the Stan and Tom Wick Poetry Prize. She is the author of The Bear Who Ate the Stars (2014), and her poems appear in Best New Poets, American Poetry Review, and TriQuarterly, among others. Julia is editor-in-chief of Construction Magazine and writes Other Women Don't Tell You, a blog about motherhood.

William Fargason is a PhD candidate in poetry at Florida State University, where he received a Kingsbury Fellowship for 2018–19. His poems have recently appeared in the Threepenny Review, Narrative, Pleiades, Poetry Northwest, Washington Square Review, and elsewhere.

Jennifer Fliss is a Seattle-based fiction and essay writer. Her work has appeared in PANK, Hobart, The Rumpus, Gigantic Sequins, and elsewhere. She can be found on Twitter at @writesforlife or via her web-site, www.jenniferflisscreative.com.

Phillip Frey's history includes professional actor, independent film-maker, and produced screenwriter. He is now devoted only to writing narrative fiction. His published books are Dangerous Times (2014) and Hym and Hur (2014). He has also had the privilege of having short stories published in various literary journals.

Mark Gosztyla's poems have recently appeared in LUMINA, mojo, Miracle Monocle, Oakland Review, Outlook Springs, and Thin Air Magazine. He studied poetry in the University of New Hampshire's MFA program and currently teaches English and coaches running at Choate Rosemary Hall in Wallingford, CT, where he lives with his wife and daughters.

Brett Hanley has an MFA from McNeese State University and recently served as the poetry editor for the McNeese Review. She is currently a PhD candidate in poetry at Florida State. Her poetry is forthcoming or has been published in Juked, Crab Creek Review, Underblong, North American Review, Hotel Amerika, apt, and elsewhere.

Lyall Harris is a book artist and writer. In the United States, her book art is held in over fifty special collection libraries at such institutions as Yale, Stanford, Berkeley, University of Washington, and National Museum of Women in the Arts. Her poetry has appeared in the New Guard, Prose Poem Project, and Pure Francis, among others. Her recent book art titles include White Privilege Likes (2018) and Nature Nurture (2018). She partnered with Patricia Silva to create the text-based installation The Interpreted Object (2018) at Cartavetra Gallery in Florence, Italy, as part of the sixteenth annual international poetry festival Voci Lontane Voci Sorelle.

Andrew Hemmert lives and works in Kalamazoo, Michigan. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in the Cincinnati Review, Greensboro Review, Hunger Mountain, North American Review, Poet Lore, Poetry Northwest, and Prairie Schooner.

Thomas Higgins is a graduate student at Villanova University.

Mehdi M. Kashani lives and writes in Toronto, Canada. His fiction and nonfiction can be found in Passages North, Rumpus, Catapult, Malahat Review, Walrus, Wigleaf, and Bellevue Literary Review, among others. He has work forthcoming in Emrys Journal. To learn more about him, visit his website www.mehdimkashani.com.

Ravitte Kentwortz is an immigrant to the United States who arrived illegally but gradually naturalized. She studies...

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