ISSN:1532-558X - Volume I, Number 2

Contributors' Notes

Jerry H. Jenkins' poems have appeared in The Formalist, The Lyric, Mobius, Mandrake Poetry Review, Harp-Strings, Piedmont Literary Review and Pirate Writings. His book-length collection of poems, in collaboration with Keith Allen Daniels and Ann K. Schwader, was published by Anamnesis Press in June 2000, under the title The Weird Sonneteers.

Anthony Lombardy's poems and translations have appeared in Classical Outlook, The Cumberland Poetry Review, The Formalist, Italian Americana, The New Yorker, Pivot, and Sparrow. His translation of Euripides' Bacchae was published and produced at Nashville's Parthenon. His first book of poems is Severe (Bennett & Kitchel 1995). He teaches classics and poetry writing at Belmont University.

David Castleman lives in a shanty in a redwood grove with two improbably conceited cats, listening by evening to John McCormack and Billie Holiday. His poems, tales and imaginatively critical essays have appeared in hundreds of journals on both sides of the Atlantic. For money he labors in a lumberyard north of San Francisco.

Cornel Adam Lengyel was born in Fairfield, Connecticut, in 1915. His literary honors include fellowships at the Macdowell Colony, the Hartford Foundation, the Ossabaw Island Project; the DiCastagnola Award of the Poetry Society of America; a National Endowment for the Arts Award. He lives on his homestead in El Dorado National Forest in Northern California. His latest book, Stop, I Told the Sun, is available from amazon.com.

Stanley Mason was born in the Canadian Rockies, reared on a British coalfield, and educated at Oxford before moving to Switzerland during WW II to teach. Later he worked many years as a translator in an engineering firm, then became editor of an art and design magazine. Three collections of his poetry have been published as well as his translation in verse of Albrecht von Haller's Die Alpen. He passed away in 1997.

Leo Yankevich's poems and translations have appeared widely on both sides of the Atlantic, most recently in Blue Unicorn, Sulphur River Literary Review, Cedar Hill Review, Envoi, The MacGuffin, Poetry Nottingham, Staple, and Windsor Review. He lives with his wife and three sons in Gliwice, Poland. His latest book, The Unfinished Crusade: New & Selected Poems, is available from The Mandrake Press through amazon.com.

Michael Daugherty lives in Douglas, Isle of Man. He has been published in many of the more prestigious British magazines over the last thirty years, establishing a reputation as a cult figure and a regular at the local saloon.

Mark Wilson lives in Denton, Texas where he works for Denton Publishing Company. He is co-founder and former editor of The Grind Magazine. Born in Natchez, Mississippi, he has lived in New Orleans, Houston, and Moscow, Russia.

Richard Alan Bunch has had poems in Nebo, Mandrake Poetry Review, Poetry Nottingham, Puddinghouse Anthology, Slant, and Sonoma Mandala. His chapbook A Foggy Morning, published by The Mandrake Press in 1996, was nominated for a Pushcart Prize.

Deborah Warren's poems have appeared in Cumberland Poetry Review, Edge City Review, The Formalist, Orbis, Sparrow, and other journals. She was the runner-up for the 1998 Robert Penn Warren Poetry Prize and the 2000 T. S. Eliot Prize.

Michael Axtell lives in Colorado Springs, Colorado. His poems and reviews have appeared widely in the small presses.



Top of Page