Barbara Elovic has published poems in many journals includingPoetry, MSS, Threepenny Review, and Exquisite Corpse. Her poems have also appeared in several anthologies, including Walk on the Wild Side: Urban American Poetry Since 1975 (Scribner's) and Many Lights in Many Windows (Milkweed, 1997). A chapbook, Time Out, was published in 1996 .  Recent poems appear in the new book To Genesis from 5 Spice Press, a book of poems that are retellings of some of the better- and lesser-known stories from the first book of the Old Testament.





Susan Sindall's poems have appeared in The Kenyon Review, Prairie Schooner, Thirteenth Moon, and Salamander, among others. She has taught poetry for Teachers and Writers Collaborative and Young Audiences, and serves as Staff Liason for Friends in the House at Poets House in New York City. She has recently published Zenith, a chapbook, with Jasperpress.





Victoria Hallerman's The Aerialist won the Bright Hill Poetry Award, 2003 and was published by Bright Hill Press. She was the 2004 winner of the Red Hen Press/Los Angeles Review Prize. Her work has been published in Poetry, The Nation, The Indiana Review, Global City Review, Pivot, and Runes, among others. She has published two chapbooks with Firm Ground Press, and her honors include, among others: Discovery/The Nation and The Pushcart Prize. She is currently at work on a memoir of married life after Prostate Cancer, entitled Surviving the Cure, (http://loveaftercancer-prostatewife.blogspot.com).



Laurel Blossom's book-length narrrative prose poem, Degrees of Latitude, is due in November, 2007, from Four Way Books. Her most recent book is Wednesday: New and Selected Poems (Ridgeway Press, 2004). Earlier books include: The Papers Said, Any Minute (both Greenhouse Review Press), and What's Wrong (Cobham & Heatherton Press). Her work has appeared in, among others, Poetry, The American Poetry Review, Pequod, The Paris Review, The Carolina Quarterly, Deadsnake Apotheosis, and Many Mountains Moving. She has recently completed a book-length poem, Degrees of Latitude, the first in a projected trilogy exploring a woman's ssearch for her human coordinates in a difficult, multi-dimensional world. Blossom is the editor of Splash! Great Writing About Swimming (Ecco Press, 1996) and Many Lights in Many Windows: Twenty Years of Great Fiction and Poetry From the Writers Community (Milkweed, 1997). She has recently moved from New York City to Edgefield, S.C. Visit her at her new website: www.laurelblossom.com.