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Gary Glauber is a New York-based poet, fiction writer, journalist, musician, and teacher. He has published two collections, "Small Consolations" (Aldrich Press, 2015) and "Worth the Candle" (Five Oaks Press, 2017), as well as a chapbook, "Memory Marries Desire" (Finishing Line Press, 2016). This book won James Tate Poetry Prize 2019.
Afric McGlinchey is an Irish-born, multi-award-winning poet based in West Cork. Raised in several countries in Africa, she has a close affinity with that continent. Afric is a post-graduate of English Literature and film (University of Cape Town), and studied journalism at Rhodes University. Previous collections include "The Lucky Star of Hidden Things" and "Ghost of the Fisher Cat" (Salmon Poetry). Her début was further translated into Italian and published by L'Arcolaio. A consulting editor with The Inkwell Group and a creative writing facilitator, she also reviews for a number of journals. According to Vona Groarke, she "...moves really beautifully between strangeness and familiarity. What's also particularly striking is the tone and register of the language and how the flow carries you along with it."
Mikko Harvey is the author of "Unstable Neighbourhood Rabbit" (House of Anansi Press, 2018). He recently received the 2017 RBC/PEN Canada New Voices Award, as well as fellowships from the MacDowell Colony and Yaddo. He currently lives in New York City, where he serves as the Joseph F. McCrindle Foundation Editorial Fellow at Poets & Writers Magazine. Jake Bauer serves as poetry editor for The Journal. His poems have recently appeared in DIAGRAM, Threepenny Review, The Bennington Review, and RHINO, among others. He lives in Philadelphia.
Born in Moscow, Russia, Anton Yakovlev is a graduate of Harvard University currently living in the New York metropolitan area. He is the author of "Ordinary Impalers" (Kelsay Books, 2017) and two prior chapbooks. His poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The Hopkins Review, Measure, The Stockholm Review of Literature, and elsewhere. "In these unsparing, unsettling, sometimes surreal poems, he makes us feel what it's like to be alive in our time-grappling with fear, grief, bewilderment, chaos, and brute contingency. These poems are a rare hybrid of intelligence and imagination. Yakovlev is a unique talent in American poetry," writes Jennifer Franklin, the author of "No Small Gift" (Four Way Books.)
Elin O'Hara Slavick is an artist and a Professor of Visual Practice at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. She is the author of two monographs - "Bomb After Bomb: A Violent Cartography" with a foreword by Howard Zinn, and "After Hiroshima", with an essay by James Elkins. Her visual work has been featured in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Images Magazine, FOAM, San Francisco Chronicle, Asia-Pacific Journal, and Photo-Eye, among other publications. Her Surrealist and Dadaist poems have been published in the Papers of Surrealism, Survision, and Lips.
Sergey Biryukov is a Russian poet living in Halle, Germany. He has published many collections of his poems, the most recent two being "The Run of Books" and "Calling" (both 2015). He also authored the monographs entitled "Zevgma: Russian Poetry, Mannerism to Postmodernism" (1994) and "The Amplitude of Avant-Garde" (2014), as well as a few other books on Russian literary avant-garde. The founder and President of the Academy of Zaum, which includes Russian Futurist poets, he was the recipient of the Alexey Kruchenykh Poetry Award. His poems have been translated into many European languages. This is his first book in English translation (by Erina Megowan and Anatoly Kudryavitsky.)
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