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          |  |  Contributors’ 
        Notes, Vol. 27, #3 _____
 
 
 LAUREN ACAMPORA lives 
        in New York City, where she received an M.F.A. from Brooklyn College. 
        Her fiction has appeared in Antioch Review, Sonora Review, Brooklyn 
        Review, and Columbia: A Journal of Literature and Art.
 
 BORIS AKUNIN is the pen name of Grigory Chkhartishvili, who was born in 
        the republic of Georgia in 1956. A philologist, critic, essayist, and 
        translator of Japanese, he is also a popular writer of detective stories. 
        His most widely read series, which includes The Winter Queen, The 
        Turkish Gambit, and The Death of Achilles, all published 
        by Random House, features the detective Erast Fandorin and is set in nineteenth-century 
        Russia. He has written ten Fandorin novels to date, which have sold more 
        than eight million copies in Russia and been translated into nearly two 
        dozen languages. He lives in Moscow.
 
 MALCOLM ALEXANDER’s poems have appeared or are forthcoming in 
        Black Warrior Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, North American Review, The 
        Southern Review, Puerto del Sol, Cream City Review, and elsewhere.
 
 DAVID BAKER’s most recent book of poems is Midwest Eclogue 
        (Norton, 2005). In 2007 Graywolf Press will publish Radiant Lyre: 
        Essays on Lyric Poetry, which he has co-edited with Ann Townsend.
 
 MARSHALL BOSWELL is the author of the novel Alternative Atlanta 
        (Delacorte Press, 2005) and the story collection Trouble with Girls 
        (Algonquin Books, 2003). His stories have appeared in Shenandoah, 
        Playboy, The Missouri Review, Sun, New Stories from the South: The Year’s 
        Best, 2001, and elsewhere. Currently the T. K. Young Professor of 
        English Literature at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee, he is also 
        the author of two works of literary scholarship, John Updike’s 
        Rabbit Tetralogy: Mastered Irony in Motion (University of Missouri 
        Press, 2001), and Understanding David Foster Wallace (University 
        of South Carolina Press, 2004).
 
 ERIC BREITBART is a filmmaker and freelance writer living in New York 
        City.
 
 XOCHIQUETZAL CANDELARIA is a professor of English at Gavilan College and 
        holds degrees from UC Berkeley and New York University. Her work has appeared 
        in The Nation, The Seattle Review, Gulf Coast, Indiana Review, The 
        Massachusetts Review, and other magazines. She currently lives 
        in San Francisco.
 
 RICK CANNING was born and raised in Oklahoma City; he went to school there 
        and in Missouri and Illinois. Over the years he has moved around—Abilene, 
        Austin, Urbana, Savannah—and has worked as a teacher, a furniture 
        mover, a teacher, a piano mover, and, just to make sure, a teacher again. 
        He was living in Boston when he decided to chuck all that and take up 
        the writing game. He now lives in Hanover, New Hampshire, with his wife 
        and three children. This is his first published story.
 
 JONATHAN FINK’s poems have appeared in Poetry, New England Review, 
        TriQuarterly, The Southern Review, Slate, Virginia Quarterly Review, and 
        Southwest Review, among other publications. From 2003–06, 
        he was the Creative Writing Fellow in Poetry and a Visiting Assistant 
        Professor of Poetry at Emory University. In the fall, he will begin teaching 
        as an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing at the University of West 
        Florida in Pensacola.
 
 B. H. FRIEDMAN has published six novels, three volumes of stories, the 
        first biographies of Jackson Pollock and Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, 
        and numerous art monographs. He has also written seven plays. His novel 
        Whispers was recommended by William Gass for a National Book 
        Award; The Polygamist was a New York Times “Notable 
        Book of the Year.” His stories have received the Nelson Algren Award 
        and a Fiction Award from the Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines.
 
 RACHEL HADAS is Board of Governors Professor of English at the Newark 
        campus of Rutgers University. The most recent of her many books of poems 
        is The River of Forgetfulness (Wordtech, 2006); a collection 
        of essays, Classics, is due out in 2007.
 
 SCOTT HIGHTOWER’s third book, Part of the Bargain, received 
        Copper Canyon Press’s 2004 Hayden Carruth Award. He is a contributing 
        editor to The Journal and Barrow Street. He lives and 
        works in New York City.
 
 MARIA HUMMEL, a native Vermonter, is a Wallace Stegner Fellow in Poetry 
        at Stanford and the author of the novel Wilderness Run (St. Martin’s, 
        2002). Her poetry and stories have appeared recently in Pleiades, 
        The Greensboro Review, Crazyhorse, and Post Road.
 
 LIZZIE HUTTON’s poetry has recently appeared in The Yale Review 
        and Gulf Coast, and her essay “The Example of Antonia White” 
        was published last year in New England Review. She currently 
        teaches at the University of Michigan and lives in Ann Arbor.
 
 SUSAN HUTTON has poems forthcoming in Poetry, Field, and American 
        Literary Review. Her book On the Vanishing of Large Creatures 
        will be published in 2007 by Carnegie Mellon University Press.
 
 BENJAMIN JACKSON recently graduated from the M.F.A. Program at Warren 
        Wilson College. These are his first published poems.
 
 MICHAEL R. KATZ is the C.V. Starr Professor of Russian Studies at Middlebury 
        College. He has translated a series of novels from Russian into English, 
        including Dostoevsky’s Notes from Underground and Devils, 
        Turgenev’s Fathers and Sons, Herzen’s Who Is 
        to Blame?, Chernyshevsky’s What Is to Be Done?, Artsybashev’s 
        Sanin, and, most recently, Vladimir Jabotinsky’s novel of Jewish 
        life in turn-of-the-century Odessa, The Five. He is currently 
        completing a translation of Vladimir Pecherin’s Notes from Beyond 
        the Tomb.
 
 RICHARD KENNEY is the author of the collections The Evolution of the 
        Flightless Bird (Yale University Press, 1984), Orrery (Atheneum, 
        1985), and The Invention of the Zero (Knopf, 1993). He teaches 
        at the University of Washington and lives with his family on the Olympic 
        Peninsula.
 
 ALEX LEMON’s first collection of poems, Mosquito, will 
        be published by Tin House Books in September 2006.  He is also the 
        author of the chapbook At Last Unfolding Congo (Burning Chair 
        Books). His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Tin House, Denver 
        Quarterly, Pleiades, Post Road, Gulf Coast, and Swink. Among 
        his awards are a 2005 Literature Fellowship in Poetry from the National 
        Endowment for the Arts and a 2006 Minnesota State Arts Board Grant. He 
        teaches at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota.
 
 ELMO LUM lives in San Francisco. His stories have appeared in StoryQuarterly 
        and The Bitter Oleander, and he is currently completing work 
        on a novel.
 
 F(ILIPPO) T(OMASSO) MARINETTI (1876–1944) was the founder and lifelong 
        promoter of the Futurist movement, beginning in 1909 with the First 
        Futurist Manifesto, in which he inveighed against the complacency 
        of “cultural necrophiliacs” and sought to annihilate the values 
        of the past. Up until his death in 1944, Marinetti strove to transform 
        society in all its aspects through both his polemical writings and his 
        political activities.
 
 CAMPBELL MCGRATH’s most recent book is Pax Atomica (Ecco 
        Press, 2004). A MacArthur Fellow, he teaches at Florida International 
        University and lives in Miami Beach.
 
 JOHN STUART MILL (1806–73) was one of the most important and influential 
        English thinkers of the nineteenth century. The oldest son of James Mill, 
        an historian and a founder of Utilitarianism, he began his intellectual 
        career at the age of three with studies in Greek, followed soon afterward 
        by studies in Latin; with his godfather, Jeremy Bentham, he established 
        the Westminster Review in 1823, when he was seventeen. Devoting 
        his attention to far-reaching social and political questions, he produced 
        a series of writings that remain significant points of departure for the 
        serious analysis of a range of contemporary issues: among these works 
        are Principles of Political Economy (1848), On Liberty 
        (1859), Considerations on Representative Government (1861), and 
        The Subjection of Women (1869). His revealing Autobiography 
        was not brought out until after his death in 1873.
 
 CRAIG NELSON is the author of three previous books, including The 
        First Heroes: The Extraordinary Story of the Doolittle Raid (Viking, 
        2002) and Let’s Get Lost: Adventures in the Great Wide Open 
        (Warner Books, 1999). His writings have appeared on Salon.com 
        and in a host of other publications. He was an editor at HarperCollins, 
        Hyperion, and Random House for nearly twenty years.
 
 PATRICK PHILLIPS’s first book, Chattahooche (Univeristy 
        of Arkansas Press, 2004), received the 2005 Kate Tufts Discovery Award, 
        as well as a “Discovery”/The Nation Award. His poems 
        have appeared in many magazines, including Poetry, Ploughshares, 
        and Virginia Quarterly Review. He recently completed a doctorate 
        in Renaissance Literature at New York University.
 
 GLEN POURCIAU’s stories have been published or are forthcoming in 
        Cimarron Review, Mississippi Review, Confrontation, and Connecticut 
        Review. One of his stories won Ontario Review’s Cooper 
        Fiction Prize while another received the Texas Institute of Letters Short 
        Story Award.
 
 HENRIETTE LAZARIDIS POWER is a graduate of Middlebury College with an 
        M.Phil. from Oxford and a Ph.D. in English from the University of Pennsylvania. 
        She taught English and writing for ten years at Harvard University, where 
        she was also an academic dean. Now a full-time writer, she is working 
        on a novel set in northern Greece. She has received a Massachusetts Cultural 
        Council Artist’s Grant for 2006. She lives in Massachusetts with 
        her husband and two children. “Chess Lessons” is her first 
        fiction publication.
 
 CHRISTINA SAJ is a painter who lives and works in New Jersey. She holds 
        degrees from Sarah Lawrence and Bard College. In her youth, she mastered 
        the techniques of Byzantine Icon painting. Her spiritually inspired works 
        have been widely exhibited and can be found in public and private collections. 
        More of her work can be seen at www.christinasaj.com.
 
 ALISON STINE is the author of the chapbook Lot of My Sister (Kent 
        State University Press, 2001). Her poems have appeared in Poetry 
        and The Paris Review, and are forthcoming in Tin House, Phoebe, 
        Meridian, The Journal, and Sou’wester. Currently a 
        Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University, she is finishing a novel.
 
 MARK SULLIVAN’s first collection of poetry, Slag (Texas 
        Tech University Press, 2005), won the Walt McDonald First Book Series 
        competition. His poems and reviews have appeared in The Nation, Shenandoah, 
        The Southern Review, and other publications. He lives in New York 
        City.
 
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