Katherine Young
Katherine E. Young's poems have appeared most recently in The Iowa Review (where she is a three-time finalist for the Iowa Award), Southern Poetry Review, Shenandoah, and The Carolina Quarterly. She is a three-time semifinalist for the "Discovery"/The Nation award, and her work has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize.
Barbara J. Orton
Barbara J. Orton's poems appear in three anthologies, The New Young American Poets, New Voices, and Under the Rock Umbrella. Her work also appears in a Web chapbook published by The Literary Review and in journals including Ploughshares, Pleiades, The Yale Review, 32 Poems, Slope, and The Innisfree Poetry Journal.
Teri Rosen
Teri Rosen has been a writer, editor, and teacher of writing for more than twenty-five years. Her work has appeared in a broad range of consumer, scholarly, and professional publications. She currently teaches writing at Hunter College and Fordham University.
Susan Bucci Mockler
Susan Bucci Mockler teaches poetry workshops in the Arlington , Va. , school system. Her work has been published or is forthcoming from the Paterson Literary Review, Poet Lore, The California Quarterly, and Voices in Italian Americana. She is the recipient of two Washington Post Grants in the Arts and lives in Arlington with her husband and three children.
Miles David Moore
Miles David Moore is a Washington reporter for Crain Communications, Inc. He is founder and host of the Iota Poetry Reading Series in Arlington, VA, a member of the Board of Directors of The Word Works, Inc., and administrator of The Word Works Washington Prize. He is the author of three books of poetry: The Bears of Paris (The Word Works Capital Collection, 1995); Buddha Isn't Laughing (Argonne Hotel Press, 1999); and Rollercoaster (The Word Works Capital Collection, 2004). With Karren LaLonde Alenier and Hilary Tham, he co-edited Winners: A Retrospective of the Washington Prize, published in 1999 by The Word Works. Fatslug Unbound, a CD of Moore's poetry read by himself and 14 other poets, was realeased in 2000 by Minimus Productions. His review/essays on the poet John Haines have appeared in The Wilderness of Vision (Story Line Press, 1996) and A Gradual Twilight (CavanKerry Press, 2003).
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