Chris
Anderson holds
a Master's degree from the
University
of
Connecticut
, where he is now a doctoral candidate completing a dissertation
entitled “Nothing Lowly: The Anti-Picturesque in American
Nature Poetry.” He is a past recipient of UConn's Outstanding
Scholar Program Fellowship, and he is a three-time winner
of both the UConn Wallace Stevens Poetry Award and the Long
River Review Graduate Writing Prize in poetry. As part
of the UConn Mentor Connection Program he has served as a
mentor to high school creative writing students, and he has
been a fiction and poetry workshop leader for the annual
conference of the Connecticut Writing Project.
Gina
Barreca is
the author of They
Used to Call Me Snow White, But I Drifted (1991), Perfect
Husbands (and Other Fairy Tales) (1993), and Sweet
Revenge: The Wicked Delights of Getting Even (1995).
Barreca also edited the Penguin
Book of Women's Humor (1996). She writes a
weekly column for The Hartford Courant and
has published articles in The New York Times, The
Chicago
Tribune, The
Orlando
Sentinel and dozens of magazines including Worth and Cosmopolitan. Most
recently, she edited the Signet
Book of American Humor (1999) and heralded
the millenium with a collection of essays, Too Much of a Good Thing is Wonderful (2000).
Lynn Z.
Bloom is
Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor and AETNA Chair
of Writing at the
University
of
Connecticut
, and the author of such autobiographical essays as "Subverting
the Academic Masterplot" (1998) and "Teaching College
English as a Woman" (1992). She
is the recipient of the 1999 Uconn Alumni Association Award
for Distinguished Research, and research awards from NCTE,
NEH, and the US Department of Agriculture. The
most recent of her seventeen books are The
St. Martin's Custom Reader (August 2001), The
Essay Connection (6th ed. 2001), and
Composition Studies as a Creative Art (1998).
Among her recent (of over 80) articles are "Freshman
Composition as a Middle Class Enterprise" (1996) and "The
Essay Canon" (1999), both in College English; and "Writing
and Cooking, Cooking and Writing" (2001). She
has also co-authored American
Autobiography 1945-1980: A Bibliography (1982),
and edited two diaries of American women civilian prisoners
in the Philippines in World War II, Natalie
Crouter's Forbidden Diary (1980) and Margaret Sams's Forbidden Family (1989,
1996). Her forthcoming books include
a book length version of The
Essay Canon (
Wisconsin
, 2003) and the co-edited Composition
Studies in the 21st Century: Rereading the Past, Rewriting
the Future (SIUP, 2003).
Scott
Bradfieldis
the author of three novels, The History of Luminous Motion, What's
Wrong with America, and Animal
Plant, and the short fiction collection Greetings
from Earth: New and Collected Stories. He
has also written several screenplays for both independent
and studio producers, four of which have been filmed, including The
Secret Life of Houses, which was accepted as
an official entry at the Sundance Film Festival in 1996
and received the Viewer's Choice Award at the Rotterdam
Film Festival. His stories, journalism
and reviews have appeared in Triquarterly,
Conjunctions, The
Vintage Book of American Short Stories, The
London Review of Books and the
Times Literary Supplement. He
was Seymour Fischer Guest Professor at the Free University
of Berlin in Spring 2001.
Kimberly
Burwick was
raised in
Massachusetts
and has lived in the
Czech
Republic
and
Wyoming
. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Fence, The Literary Review, Hotel
Amerika and other journals. Her
first book of poems, Has No Kinsmen, is forthcoming
from Red Hen Press.
Ken Cormier began
making his name as a recording artist & performance poet
in
Ann Arbor
in 1995 with his self-released cassette tape God Damn Doghouse.
In 2000, Cormier toured the
US
and
Canada
to support the publication of his first book, Balance
Act (Insomniac Press), and
the CD release of God Damn Doghouse (Elis Eil Records).
Elis Eil released his second CD, Radio-Bueno, in February
2002. Cormier is currently a graduate
student at the
University
of
Connecticut
, where he teaches classes in English Composition, Expressive
Writing in Performance, and Songwriting.
Margaret
Gibson has
published seven books of poems, most recently Icon and Evidence,
2001; Earth
Elegy: New and Selected Poems, 1997;The Vigil, a Finalist
for the National Book Award in Poetry, 1993; Out in the Open,
1989; Memories
of the Future, Melville Cane Award, 1986; Long
Walks in the Afternoon, Lamont Selection for
1982; and Signs, 1979. She
has been a recipient of various grants, including the National
Endowment for the Arts Grant and the Lila Wallace/Readers
Digest Fellowship. Individual
poems have won awards such as the James Boatwright Prize,
the Robinson Jeffers Tor House Poetry Prize (honorable
mention) and a 2001 Pushcart prize. She has taught in MFA
programs at the
University
of
Massachusetts
and
Virginia
Commonwealth
University
, and is half—year Visiting Professor at the
University
of
Connecticut
.
Kevin Goodan was
raised in western
Montana
, where he fought forest fires for many years. He
received his B.A. at the
University
of
Montana
, and his MFA at the
University
of
Massachusetts- Amherst
. His first book of poetry, In
the Ghost-House Aquainted (Alice James Press, 2004) was
awarded the L.L. Shipman/PEN
New England
Award.
V.
Penelope Pelizzon is
the director of the Creative Writing Program
at the University of Connecticut, and the
author of Nostos (Ohio University
Press, 2000), which was selected for the
Hollis Summers Prize and subsequently received
the Poetry Society of America's Norma Farber
First Book Award. New
poems and work from her second book in progress
have appeared recently in Poetry, The
Kenyon Review, Field, and The
New England
Review. Her creative nonfiction and scholarly essays have been
pubished in Creative Nonfiction, The
Yale Journal of Criticism, American
Studies. She
was a fellow at the Uconn Humanities
Institute in 2004-05.
Sam
Pickering has
written 15 books; twelve of them are collections of personal
essays. The most recent is The
Last Book, published by the University Tennessee
Press, 2001. He is now writing his second book on
Australia
, this one an account of the 12 months he recently spent
in the western part of the continent. The
book is tentatively titled Waltzing the Magpies. And
the book is terrible. It will never be published. Only
miraculous rewriting will save it.
Sydney
Landon Plum writes
about birds and about our lives in the natural world. The
editor of Coming
Through the Swamp: The Nature Writings of Gene Stratton
Porter, Plum has also written about Porter
and about the writer and photographer Hope Ryden for American
Nature Writers. She attended the Bread Loaf
Writers' Conference as a scholar and participates in the
Association for the Study of Literature and Environment.
She is currently an adjunct in creative writing at the
University of Connecticut.
Aaron
Sanders is
a writer who pays the bills by staying home with his two
boys by day and working as a PhD candidate by night. He
works as the Assistant Director in the Creative Writing
Program at UConn and holds an MFA from the University of
Utah. Aaron's most recent work appears in Quarterly West,
Beloit Fiction Journal, Jabberwock Review, Hawaii Review,
and Aura Literary Arts Review and has been featured on
WAMC's “The Roundtable” (Northeast Public Radio). Aaron
just finished a collection of short stories and is at work
on a novel. Currently, Aaron teaches courses in Creative
Writing, Writing and Performance, Small Presses and Literary
Journals, and Composition and conducts writing workshops
all over Connecticut.
Lauren
Sarat has
taught creative writing at Brown University, Rhode Island
College, and Rutgers University. While living in Manhattan,
she founded a series of meditation and writing workshops
entitled "This Writer's Life," which she conducts
through the Boston Learning Society and the Learning Connection
in Providence. She has an extensive background in publishing,
and worked as a literary agent, an assistant editor with
Picador USA/St. Martin's Press, a features editor for Barnesandnoble.com,
and spent years as a bookseller. Her short story, "Russian
Lessons," has been nominated for the 2003 Pushcart
Prize, and "Tejas" was a finalist in the Raymond
Carver Short Story Contest. Her fiction and poetry have
appeared in Shenandoah,
New York Stories, Anonymous, The Plum Creek Review, Turnstile, and
is forthcoming in Confrontation.