Issue Two: September 2009
Erik  Anderson's work has appeared (or is forthcoming) in The  Recluse, American Letters & Commentary, Fou, Sleepingfish, Parcel,  Witness, Trickhouse, Dear Camera, The Laurel Review, and others. A  former contributing editor at the Denver Quarterly, he co-edits  the mail-art magazine Thuggery & Grace.
 Jason  Bredle is the author of two books and three chapbooks of poetry: A  Twelve Step Guide (New Michigan Press, 2004); Standing in Line  for the Beast (New Issues, 2007); Pain Fantasy (Red  Morning Press, 2007); American Sex Machine (Scantily Clad  Press, 2009); and Class Project (Publishing Genius, 2009).  Individual poems have appeared in the Knopf anthology Poems About  Horses, 180 More: Extraordinary Poems for Every Day from Random  House, TriQuarterly, and many other places. He lives in  Chicago. 
 Jonathan  Callahan is on sabbatical from the Lookings Institute, where he is  an Associate Director of Inquiry, in order to complete the final book of  his novel, The Consummation of Dirk. He lives in Fukuoka,  Japan. 
 Brian  Allen Carr lives near the Texas/Mexico border. His fiction has  appeared or is forthcoming in Boulevard, Texas Review, Keyhole,  Front Porch and other publications. His reviews have appeared in American  Book Review and New Pages. He currently teaches at South  Texas College. He can be found online at www.brianallencarr.com. 
 Anna  Clark's writing has appeared in The American Prospect Online,  AlterNet, Blood Lotus, Utne Reader, Common Dreams, Women's eNews,  Religion Dispatches, The Women's International Perspective, ColorLines,  Bitch Magazine, Writer's Journal, RH Reality Check, truthout,  and many other publications. She edits the literary and social justice  website, Isak. She lives and  writes from Detroit, MI.
 
 Elizabeth  Crane is the author of three collections of short stories, When  the Messenger is Hot, All this Heavenly Glory, and You Must Be  This Happy to Enter.  Her work has also been featured in numerous  publications, anthologies and on NPR’s Selected Shorts.  She is a  recipient of the Chicago Public Library 21st Century Award, and her work  has been adapted for the stage by Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theater  company, and has also been adapted for film.  She currently teaches at  UCR Palm Desert’s Low Residency MFA program. 
 Darby  M. Dixon III can be found in the Cleveland, Ohio, area, doing  marketing by day, sporadic litblogging by night, and other stuff in  between. 
 Stephen  Elliott is the author of seven books including the brand new true  crime memoir The Adderall Diaries. He had written for The  New York Times, Esquire, The Believer, and others. His work has  been anthologized in The Best American Non-Required Reading 2005 & 2007, Best Sex Writing, and Best American  Erotica. 
 
 Edward  Falco grew up in Brooklyn and teaches at Virginia Tech in  Blacksburg, Virginia, where he is the director of the MFA program in  Creative Writing.  He is the prize-winning author of several books  including his new and selected stories, Sabbath Night in the Church  of the Piranha and, most recently, the highly acclaimed novel, Wolf  Point.
 
 Rachel  Contreni Flynn's second full-length collection, Tongue,  won the Benjamin Saltman Award and is forthcoming from Red Hen Press,  and her chapbook, Haywire, is now available from Bright Hill  Press. Her first book, Ice, Mouth, Song, was published in 2005  by Tupelo Press, after winning the Dorset Prize. She was awarded a  Fellowship from the NEA in 2007. Her work has twice been nominated for a  Pushcart Prize, and she received an Illinois Arts Council Artists  Fellowship in 2005. She is a graduate of the Warren Wilson College MFA  Program and lives north of Chicago with her husband and two children. 
 Elisa  Gabbert is the poetry editor of Absent. Recent work can be  found in Colorado Review, Diagram, Pleiades, and Typo.  She is the author of two chapbooks from Kitchen Press, Thanks for  Sending the Engine and My Fear of X (forthcoming). She  lives in Boston. 
 Christopher  Kennedy is the author of Encouragement for a Man Falling to His  Death (BOA Editions), which received the Isabella Gardner Poetry  Award in 2007, Trouble with the Machine (Low Fidelity Press),  and Nietzsche's Horse (Mitki/Mitki Press). He is an associate  professor of English at Syracuse University, where he directs the MFA  Program in Creative Writing.
 Sean  Lovelace blogs at seanlovelace.com.  He teaches writing and editing at Ball State University. His new flash  fiction chapbook How Some People like Their Eggs was recently  released by Rose Metal Press. He likes to run, far. 
 Josh  Maday lives in Michigan. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in  New York Tyrant, Action Yes, Apostrophe Cast, elimae, Barrelhouse,  Keyhole Magazine, Word Riot, Lamination Colony, and elsewhere. He  is a member of the National Book Critics Circle and can be found online  at http://joshmaday.blogspot.com.  
 John  Madera is a member of the National Book Critics Circle. You may  find him at elimae, ArtVoice, Underground Voices, Little White  Poetry Journal #7, hitherandthithering  waters, and My Pet Earworm, and forthcoming at Opium  Magazine and Publishing Genius Press. He reviews for The Diagram, The Quarterly Conversation, 3:AM Magazine, New Pages, Open  Letters Monthly, The Rumpus, and Word Riot, and edits the  online journal The Chapbook Review. He sings and plays guitar  for Mother Flux. 
 
 Jamaal  May has been awarded a Cave Canem Fellowship and an International  Publication Prize from Atlanta Review. His poems have appeared  in The MacGuffin, Main Street Rag, The Drunken Boat, Verse Daily and elsewhere.  He is currently an MFA candidate at Warren Wilson.
 Stacy  Muszynski writes. Her recent work appears at elimae, Opium,  Everyday Genius, The Rumpus, more. She web edits American Short  Fiction and co-hosts Five  Things Austin. 
 Jill  Meyers is the editor of American Short Fiction. Her book  reviews have appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle and Mid-American  Review as well as on Bookslut. 
 Kathleen  Rooney is an editor of Rose Metal Press and the author, most  recently, of Live Nude Girl: My Life as an Object (Arkansas,  2009) and Oneiromance (an epithalamion) (Switchback, 2008). She  lives in Chicago. With Elisa Gabbert, she is the co-author of Something  Really Wonderful (Dancing Girl Press), That Tiny Insane  Voluptuousness (Otoliths), and Don’t ever stay the same; keep  changing (forthcoming from Spooky Girlfriend Press). 
 Angi  Becker Stevens stories can be found in recent or future issues of  many print and online journals including Barrelhouse, Pank,  SmokeLong Quarterly, Storyglossia, Necessary Fiction, Monkeybicycle online, Annalemma, Emprise Review, and more. She lives with  her family in Michigan. "Even If You Were Here" was also the winner of  the 2009 Jumpmettle Award at Eastern Michigan University. 
 Keith  Taylor's most recent book is If the World Becomes So Bright.  He wrote an entry on Hemingway for A New Literary History of  America, just published by Harvard University Press. And one of his  co-translations of Karyotakis will be in the forthcoming Norton  anthology, The Greek Poets: Homer to the Present. This is all  making him feel uncomfortably canonical. 
