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Daniel Bourne, born on March 2,
1955, in Olney, Illinois, grew up on a farm. In 1979 he received his
B.A. from Indiana University with a double major in Comparative
Literature (receiving the Outstanding Undergraduate in Comparative
Literature Award) and in History. In 1987 he received an M.F.A. in
Creative Writing from Indiana University. Currently he teaches creative
writing at The College of Wooster, and has previously taught at Western
Illinois University. He is the author of Boys Who Go Aloft,
a poetry chapbook published by Sparrow Press in 1987. His first
full-length book of poetry, The Household Gods, was
published in 1995 in the Cleveland State University Poetry Center
series. The recipient of Ohio Arts Council fellowships for 1990-1992
and 1992-1993, he has in the past contributed poems to such journals as
Ploughshares, American Poetry Review, Shenandoah (nominated
for a Pushcart), Field, Prairie Schooner, Poetry East, Tar
River Poetry, Poetry Northwest, Salmagundi, Graham House Review, Alaska
Quarterly Review, Chariton Review, Carolina Quarterly, Clockwatch
Review, Confrontation, Minnesota Review, Mississippi Valley Review,
River Styx, Spoon River Quarterly, Laurel Review, Kansas Quarterly,
Another Chicago Magazine, Indiana Review, North Dakota Quarterly,
Willow Springs, Yellow Silk, Exquisite Corpse, and Louisville Review.
His poem "The Language of the Dead" appeared in A Gathering
of Poets (Kent State University Press), an anthology in
observance of the 20th anniversary of the 1970 Kent State shootings,
and his poem "Beside the Road" won first place for poetry in Indiana
Review's 15th anniversary literary competition in 1993.
From 1978 to 1985 he worked in a rare book library
at Indiana University, spending the summer of 1980 as an English
instructor at the Polytechnic Institute of Wroclaw, Poland, and
returning to Poland in 1982-83 as a research fellow on a graduate
exchange program between Indiana University and Warsaw University. In
1985 he once again returned to Poland on a two-year Fulbright
fellowship for more work on the translation of younger Polish poets.
His translations of Polish poet Tomasz Jastrun are in Penguin's
anthology of Eastern European poetry, Child of Europe and in
Norton's Against Forgetting: Twentieth-Century Poetry of
Witness (edited by Carolyn Forché), and have also been in Northwest
Review, Partisan Review, Salmagundi, Ohio Review, River Styx,
Shenandoah (nominated for a Pushcart), Prairie Schooner, Confrontation,
Beloit Poetry Journal, Willow Springs, Quarterly West, Chariton Review,
Literary Review, New Orleans Review, Cutbank, Another Chicago Magazine,
Artful Dodge, Witness, and Graham House Review. His
translations of another younger Polish poet, Bronislaw Maj, have been
featured in Beloit Poetry Journal and also appear
in Cross-currents, Salmagundi, Hawaii Review, and Seneca
Review. In the summer of 1989 he returned to Poland on a
fellowship to do further translation work, and this past autumn he
spent three months in Poland, England, Sweden and the Czech Republic
for more work with Polish authors. He is the editor of the section on
Polish for Shifting Borders, an anthology of Eastern European poetry
published in 1993 by Associated University Presses.
Karin Lin-Greenberg is the
fiction editor. She currently teaches fiction, poetry and nonfiction
writing at the College of Wooster. She earned an M.A. in English and
Creative Writing at Temple University and an M.F.A. in fiction writing
at the University of Pittsburgh. Her work has appeared in journals
including Bellevue Review, Berkeley Fiction Review, Cutthroat, Eclipse, Karamu, Redivider, and Yemassee.
Marcy Campbell is the associate fiction
editor. Her stories have won awards
in contests sponsored by Ohio Writer magazine and
the Summer
Literary Seminars, and she earned a grant from the Vermont Studio
Center where she completed a residency. Her fiction appears in
recent issues of Sou'wester, Pindeldyboz,
Westview and The Pedestal
Magazine, among other journals. Her poem, "Traffic," was
"published" on 750 buses in the Cleveland area as part of the
"Moving Minds: Verse and Vision Project." Marcy teaches writing at
the College of Wooster and has also taught at the University of
Akron-Wayne College and at Eastern Michigan University where she
earned her M.A. in creative writing.
Carolyne Wright
grew up in Seattle, studied at Seattle University, and went to Chile on
a Fulbright Study Grant during the presidency of Salvador Allende.
Wright is working on an investigative memoir of that year, The
Road to Isla Negra (PEN/Jerard Fund Award for nonfiction in
progress). After completing her M.A. and D.A. in English/Creative
Writing at Syracuse, she spent four years on fellowships in Calcutta
and Dhaka, Bangladesh, translating the work of Bengali women poets and
writers. Her new collection of poems is A Change of Maps
(Lost Horse Press, 2006), finalist for the Idaho Prize and the Alice
Fay di Castagnola Award from the Poetry Society of America. Her
previous book of poetry, Seasons of Mangoes and Brainfire
(Eastern Washington University Press/Lynx House Books, 2nd edition
2005), received the Blue Lynx Prize and American Book Award from the
Before Columbus Foundation. Besides six other books and chapbooks of
poetry, among them Premonitions of an Uneasy Guest
(AWP Award Series) and the invitational chapbook Carolyne
Wright: Greatest Hits 1975-2001 (Pudding House
Publications), she has three volumes of poetry in translation from
Bengali and Chilean Spanish, and a collection of essays. Forthcoming in
2007 is the anthology Majestic Nights: Love Poems of Bengali
Women (White Pine Press). She has held fellowships from the
Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, the New York State Council on
the Arts, the Bunting Institute/Radcliffe College, the NEA, and the
Witter Bynner Foundation. A visiting poet and professor at colleges,
universities, and writers' conferences throughout the U.S., Wright
taught at The College of Wooster and served as Special Guest Editor for
poetry for Artful Dodge in 2003-2004. She
recently moved back to her native Seattle, and currently teaches in the
Whidbey Writers Workshop MFA program and for Seattle's Richard Hugo
House. She is now Translation Editor for Artful Dodge,
and on the Board of Directors of the AWP for 2004-2008.
Karen Kovacik is Associate
Professor of English and Director of Creative Writing at Indiana
University Purdue University Indianapolis. She is the recipient of a
number of awards, including a guest fellowship at the University of
Wisconsin's Institute for Creative Writing, an Arts Council of
Indianapolis Creative Renewal Fellowship, and a Fulbright Research
Grant to Poland. Her poems and stories have appeared in many journals,
including Salmagundi, Chelsea, Glimmer Train, Massachusetts
Review, Indiana Review, and Crab Orchard Review.
Her translations of contemporary Polish poetry can be found in The
Lyric, American Poetry Review, West Branch, and Poetry
East. She is the author of the following poetry collections: Metropolis
Burning (Cleveland State, 2005), Beyond the Velvet
Curtain (Kent State, 1999), and Nixon and I
(Kent State, 1998).
John McCrory, after dropping
out of architecture school in 1987, has variously made a living as a
bicycle messenger, baker, bookstore clerk, graphic designer, and until
recently, a marketer of academic books for The Free Press.
His poetry has appeared in Artful Dodge, and he has
served as an editorial assistant for Antaeus/The Ecco Press and
as editor of Goliard, the College of Wooster's
student literary journal. He is currently a student at Pratt
Institute's Graduate Center for Planning and the Environment in
Brooklyn, NY.
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