Issue Sixty-Seven Contributors

 

We’ve got some amazing new contributors waiting to meet you…

Karen Boissoneault-Gauthier
Karen Boissonneault-Gauthier is a writer and a photographer who has developed a real love for capturing life and forms with her camera. Her work has been featured in many different forums, from national newspapers to heritage museums.  She began her career in the field of news journalism and it was there she excelled at the art of photography; with film, negatives and endless hours in a darkroom. This appealed to the artist in her. She likes to say she has a trained eye for what the camera loves and that’s why she rarely turns the lens onto herself.  Enjoying experimentation with the camera has allowed Karen to broaden her photographic experiences to include portrait, fashion and style portfolios, lifestyles, sports, horse racing, military life,  news, education and entertainment work. Presently, she is an online magazine columnist and photography contributor, putting her journalism/photography and mass communications degrees finally to good use. She has always found a place for her photography in print and online, being featured in Jaw Dropping Shots, and at literary magazines such as The Canadian Vocational Journal, Crack The Spineand Zen Dixie to name a few.

Brian J. Helt
Born in San Diego, Brian discovered writing at an early age.  He didn’t realize it as his true calling until attending the California State Summer School for the Arts in 2006, and has since never looked back.  “For Lilly” was a piece he began writing during his Creative Writing studies at SFSU.  He is currently working on a novel, residing in the San Francisco/Bay Area.

Carolyn Mainardi
Carolyn Mainardi, a graduate of Boston University, lives and writes all around New England. Her short fiction appears in Danse Macabre and fiftywordstories.com, and is forthcoming in Burn Magazine. 

Howard Winn
Most recently Howard Winn has had  poems and fiction  published in, Dalhousie Review, Descant (Canada), Cactus Heart, Main Street Rag, Caduceus, Burning Word, Pennsylvania Literary Journal. Southern Humanities Review, Cutting Edgz, Borderlands. and The Hiram Poetry Journal. His B. A. is from Vassar College. His M.A. degree is from the Writing Program at Stanford University. He did his doctoral work at New York University and University of California San Francisco. He was a psychiatric social worker and also taught for three years in California. He is a State University of New York faculty member.

R.D. McManes
R.D. McManes is the author of seven poetry books.  Mr. McManes has had over 200 poems featured in 60 worldwide publications , including Scrivener’s Pen, Mipo Magazine, Swooping Hawk Quarterly, The Heron’s Nest, Poems Niederngasse, SP Quill Quarterly Magazine, Newtopia, Lochraven Review, Muddy River Review, Commonline Journal, and Barefooot Review.   He has been a featured speaker and conducted poetry workshops and copyright presentations for the Kansas Author’s Club.  He currently resides near Scranton, Kansas.

Greg Moglia
Greg Moglia is a veteran of 27 years as Adjunct Professor of Philosophy of Education at N.Y.U.  and 37 years as a high school teacher of Physics and Psychology.  His poems have been accepted in over 100 journals in the U.S., Canada and England as well as five anthologies.  He is five times a winner of an Allan Ginsberg Poetry Award sponsored by the Poetry Center at Passaic County Community College.  He lives in Huntington, N.Y. 

Robert Marshall
Robert Marshall’s novel, A Separate Reality, was released in 2006 by Carroll & Graf and was nominated for a Lambda Literary Award for Debut Fiction. In its review of A Separate Reality, The Washington Post called it “as good an encapsulation of adolescence as you’re likely to read.” His work has also appeared or is forthcoming in Salon, The Michigan Quarterly Review, The Alembic, apt, Event, DUCTS, Stickman Review, Blithe House Quarterly, The Coe Review, Foliate Oak, Blue Lake Review, and numerous other publications, including the anthologies Queer 13 and Afterwords. In 2007, his investigative feature “The Dark Legacy of Carlos Castaneda” was chosen for “Best of Salon.” A visual artist as well as a writer, he has exhibited widely in both Europe and the United States at venues such as Richard Anderson Fine Arts, the Peter Kilchmann Gallerie in Zurich, the Köln Art Fair, White Columns, and the Brooklyn Museum. He is a recipient of fellowships from MacDowell, Yaddo, The Virginia Center and the New York Foundation for the Arts.

Kenyatta Jean-Paul Garcia
Kenyatta Jean-Paul Garcia is the author of “This Sentimental Education” and “Enter the After-Garde” along with two other collections of poetry. He was raised in Brooklyn, NY and has a degree in Linguistics.  He has studied several living and dead languages in addition to philosophy and poetry at SUNY Albany and Hudson Valley Community College.  He spent over ten years working in restaurants – cooking, washing dishes, etc.  Currently, he works overnights putting boxes on shelves.  By day, he runs kjpgarcia.wordpress and altpoetics.wordpress.com.