Issue No. 2, Winter 2006
 

CONTRIBUTORS


ADAM BENFORADO is a Frank Knox Fellow at Cambridge University.  His poetry and prose appear in the current issues of alice blue, Boston Review, The Café Irreal, The Circle, and Cricket Online Review.

MARK P. BOWEN, a former poetry editor for
Columbia, is the recipient of several fellowships from the Graduate Creative Writing Program at Columbia University.  He currently divides his time between New York City and Vermont.

PATRICK CARRINGTON teaches literature and creative writing in New Jersey, where he also serves as the poetry editor for Mannequin Envy.  His poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in various journals, including Red Rock Review, Clark Street Review, Caveat Lector, Wavelength, and DMQ Review.

HILDRED CRILL, a 2004 graduate of the MFA Program at New England College, lives in Stockholm, Sweden. Her poetry has been published in such journals as Poetry, Colorado Review, The Literary Review, and Cream City Review.  In 1999, she co-edited the anthology, Under the Legislature of Stars: 62 New Hampshire Poets (Oyster River Press).

PHIL CRIPPEN is a graduate of the University of Arizona and Oxford University (UK).  His work has recently or will soon appear in Shampoo, The Argotist, and the anthology Enopoetica (Story Line Press, forthcoming).

RUTH DANON is the author of Triangulation From a Known Point (Blue Moon Books, 1990).  Her work has appeared in numerous journals, including Best American Poetry 2002, The Paris Review, Fence, The New England Review, The Gettysburg Review, 3rd Bed, Moria, and The Ontario Review. She is presently a full-time faculty member at New York University, where she directs the Creative Writing Program for the University’s McGhee Division.

JEHANNE DUBROW holds an MFA in Poetry from the University of Maryland, and is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Creative Writing at the University of Nebraska.  Recent poems have appeared in Poetry, Hudson Review, Tikkun, and The New England Review.

MELISSA JONES FIORI is a professional translator.  In addition to an MA in Translation and Interpretation, she holds an MFA from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.  Her chapbook, The Language of Exile, has just been published by Main Street Rag.

IRA JOE FISHER is a correspondent for CBS, appearing on the network’s Saturday Early Show.  His poems have appeared in New York Quarterly, Poetry New York, Diner, The Alembic, and elsewhere.  A graduate of the MFA Program at New England College, he currently teaches at the University of Connecticut at Stamford.

MAUREEN TOLMAN FLANNERY is the author of four books of poetry, including A Fine Line (Fractal Edge Press, 2004) and Ancestors in the Landscape (John Gordon Burke, 2004), which was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. Her poems have been published in such journals as Midwest Quarterly, Atlanta Review, Amherst Review,
Meridian, Calyx, Evansville Review, Slant, and Margin.

JENNIFER S. FLESCHER is currently a student in the MFA Program at Lesley University.  Her poems have appeared in The Boston Globe and are forthcoming in The Harvard Review.

RICH FURMAN is an Associate Professor of Social Work at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.  His poems have appeared in such venues as Hawaii Review, Free Lunch,
Pearl, Red Rock Review, and Penn Review.  He is also the author of two chapbooks, Of Only Average Intent (Snorting Dog Press, 2002) and Gleaming and Faded (Snorting Dog Press, 2003).

PATRICIA GIRAGOSIAN is the author of two collections of poetry, and is currently working on a third.  She has taught writing at several New England colleges, and has a poem appearing this winter in The Classical Outlook.

REBECCA GIVENS
lives in Athens, Greece, where she teaches literature.  She has new work out or forthcoming in Gettysburg Review,
Meridian, 32 Poems, Puerto del Sol, and Hollins Critic.

LIZZIE HUTTON is a graduate of the MFA Program at the University of Michigan, where she won a Hopwood Award and a Meader Award.  Her poetry and prose has appeared in Yale Review, The New England Review, and
Gulf Coast.

CHARLES JENSEN is the author of the chapbook Little Burning Edens, which was awarded the Red Mountain Review Chapbook Award in 2005.  His poems are forthcoming from or have appeared in New England Review,
Washington Square, The Journal, Quarterly West, West Branch, No Tell Motel, and elsewhere.  An editor for the literary journal three candles and a freelance writer for Outlook Arizona, he presently works for the Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing at Arizona State University.

DANIEL KHALASTCHI received his B.A. in English at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, and his MFA in Poetry from the University of Iowa’s Writers’ Workshop.  His poems have appeared in Octopus Magazine and can be found in the forthcoming issue of Pebble Lake Review.  He currently lives in Iowa City, teaching freshman composition (and low-level Hebrew) to anyone who’ll listen.

DAVID KOEHN has published in a wide range of journals, including New England Review, New York Quarterly, ZYZZYVA, Alaska Quarterly Review, Third Coast, Delmar, REAL, Illuminations, and The Bitter Oleander.  A graduate of the MFA Program at the University of Florida and a former Fellow at the Breadloaf School of English at Middlebury College, he is a past winner of the Midnight Sun Chapbook Contest, sponsored by the University of Alaska at Fairbanks.

KENNEY MENCHER received an MA in Art History from the University of California at Davis, and an MFA in Painting from the University of Cincinnati.  He has taught at several colleges and universities, including the University of Chicago, Texas A&M University, and Ohlone College (CA).  He is the author of the textbook Liasons:
Readings in Art, Literature and Philosophy.  His artwork has appeared in numerous solo, joint, and group exhibitions across the country, including the Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts (CA), the Elliot Fouts Gallery (CA), the Laredo Center for the Arts (TX), the Brody Gallery (OH), the Period Gallery (NE), the Bryant Gallery (MI), the Hanson Gallery (TN), and The National Arts Club in New York City.

ROBERT NAZARENE is the founding editor of MARGIE and the author of CHURCH (IntuiT House Poetry Series, 2006).  His work has appeared in such journals as Ploughshares, Beloit Poetry Journal, North American Review, Arts & Letters, Boulevard, New York Quarterly, Indiana Review, and Crazyhorse.

SIMON PERCHIK is an attorney and author who has published nineteen books of poetry, including Hands Collected (Pavement Saw Press, 2000), Touching the Headstone (Stride Publications, 2000), and Letters to the Dead (Saint Andrews College Press, 1993).  His poems have appeared in numerous journals, including The New Yorker, Poetry, The Nation, Colorado Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, The North American Review, and Partisan Review.

EMILY PÉREZ is a student in the MFA Program at the University of Houston, where she is a poetry editor for Gulf Coast.  Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Many Mountains Moving, Bat City Review, The Kennesaw Review, and Touchstone.

FREDERICK POLLACK is the author of two book-length narrative poems, Adventure (Story Line Press, 1986) and Happiness (Story Line Press, 1998).  His poems and essays have appeared in such venues as Hudson Review, Southern Review, Poetry Salzburg Review, Fulcrum, Die Gazette (Munich), and elsewhere.

KATHLEEN ROONEY has new work appearing or forthcoming in Crab Orchard Review, Smartish Pace, Passages North, and Phoebe.  Her first book is Reading With Oprah (University of Arkansas Press, 2005).

DAN ROSENBERG is an MFA candidate at the Iowa Writers
Workshop.  His poems have appeared in or are forthcoming from POOL, Mustachioed, KultureVulture, Mid-American Review, and Iodine.

CHRISTOPHER SALERNO
is the author of Whirligig (Spuyten Duyvil, 2006), which was short-listed for the 2005 Walt Whiman Award from the Academy of American Poets.  His chapbook, Waving Something White was published the University Book Exchange’s Independent Press in 2003.  Recently named a finalist for the Emerging Writers Award from Swink, his poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in such journals as Colorado Review, Barrow Street, jubilat, LIT, River City, North Carolina Literary Review, 5AM, and the online edition of AGNI.  He currently teaches Poetry and American Literature at North Carolina State University.

JENEVA STONE holds a doctorate in Renaissance Literature from Columbia University, and is currently enrolled in the MFA Program at Warren Wilson College. She has poems forthcoming in Colorado Review and Tigertail: A South Florida Annual.

JAY SURDUKOWSKI is a law student at the University of Michigan, where he is the Managing Editor of the Michigan Journal of International Law and recently published a note entitled, Is Poetry a War Crime? Reckoning for Radovan Karadzic the Poet Warrior. He has published his work in several journals, including Poet Lore, The Iconoclast, and Diagram.  His recent summers have been spent at the International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia in the Hague.

TODD SWIFT
is the author of three collections of poems, most recently Rue du Regard (DC Books, 2004).  The editor of six poetry anthologies, including 100 Poets Against the War (Salt, 2003), he is also the poetry editor of Nthposition.  His poems have recently appeared in The Manhattan Review, Poetry London, London Magazine, and Gargoyle.  In 2005, he guest-edited a feature on new Canadian poetry for New American Writing.  He is presently a Tutor at The Poetry School in London, England.

BARRY WALLENSTEIN is the author of five books of poetry, most recently A Measure of Conduct (Ridgeway Press, 1999).  Pandemoium, a CD fusing his poetry with jazz, was released by Cadence Jazz Records in 2005.  His work has appeared in such magazines as Ploughshares, The Nation, The Laurel Review, and Centennial Review

FREDRICK ZYDEK, a former teacher of creative writing and theology at the University of Nebraska at Omaha and the College of Saint Mary, is the author of eight collections of poetry, including the forthcoming T’Kopachuk: The Buckley Poems (Winthrup Press).  A recipient of both the Hart Crane Poetry Award and the Sarah Foley O’Loughlen Award, his work has appeared in numerous journals, including Poetry, New England Review, The Antioch Review, Prairie Schooner, Nimrod, and The Seattle Review.  He is currently the Editor of the Lone Willow Press Chapbook Series
.
 

Masthead

Poetry

Adam Benforado
Mark P. Bowen
Patrick Carrington
Hildred Crill
Phil Crippen
Ruth Danon
Jehanne Dubrow
Melissa Jones Fiori
Ira Joe Fisher
Maureen Flannery
Jennifer S. Flescher
Rich Furman
Patricia Giragosian
Rebecca Givens
Charles Jensen
Daniel Khalastchi
Robert Nazarene
Simon Perchik
Emily Pérez
Frederick Pollack
Dan Rosenberg
Christopher Salerno
Jeneva Stone
Jay Surdukowski
Todd Swift
Barry Wallenstein
Fredrick Zydek

Reviews

LIZZIE HUTTON:
James Richardson's
Interglacial: New
and Selected Poems
& Aphorisms


DAVID KOEHN:
Frank Bidart's
Star Dust: Poems


KATHLEEN ROONEY:
Matthew Thorburn's
Subject to Change


Artwork

Kenney Mencher
Jo Adang

Contributors

 

© 2006 The New Hampshire Review. All rights reserved.