Warren Longmire is a Philly native, teacher, computer programmer, poetry editor for Apiary Magazine and a 3 time member of the Philadelphia Fuze’s national slam. He’s been published in Certain Circuits, The New Purlieu Review, Eleven Eleven and two chapbooks: Ripped Winters and Do.Until.True. You can find him making abrupt pauses and wild hand gestures […]
Contributors 90
Katt Lissard
Katt Lissard teaches in the Graduate Institute at Goddard College and is the artistic director of The Winter/Summer Institute, an HIV/AIDS theatre project based in New York and Lesotho (maketheatre.org). Her essay, “Venus in Lesotho: Women, Theatre and the Collapsible Boundaries of Silence,” is included in Palgrave Macmillan’s Feminist Popular Education in Transnational Debates; recent […]
Victoria Large
Victoria Large is a Massachusetts native who holds an MFA in Creative Writing from Emerson College. Her short fiction has appeared in various print and online publications, including Carve Magazine and Monkeybicycle.
Alyse Knorr
Alyse Knorr is the author of Copper Mother (Switchback Books, 2015), Annotated Glass (Furniture Press Books, 2013) and the chapbook Alternates (dancing girl press, 2014). Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Denver Quarterly, Hayden’s Ferry Review, ZYZZYVA, Drunken Boat, and The Southern Poetry Anthology (Texas Review Press, 2012), among others. She received her […]
M.P. Jones IV
M.P. Jones IV recently received a master’s in literature from Auburn University, where he read for Southern Humanities Review. He is also founder and editor-in-chief of Kudzu House Quarterly , a southern journal of literature & environment. His recent work includes poetry in Harpur Palate, Portland Review, Tampa Review, Canary Magazine, Town Creek Poetry, Cumberland […]
Kimberly Horne
Kimberly Horne is a native Alabamian now living and teaching in Austin, TX. She received her MFA from The University of Virginia and has been previously published in The 2River View, The Spoon River Poetry Review, Borderlands, Poet Lore, Puerto Del Sol, and Southern Poetry Review.