Issue Sixty-Three Contributors

Meet some fine folks…

Mark Oliver
Mark Oliver is a writer based out of Toronto, Ontario. More stories by the same author can be viewed at his website at http://markoliverfiction.wordpress.com.

Abigail Warren
Abigail Warren lives in Northampton, Massachusetts and teaches at Cambridge College. Her work has appeared, or is forthcoming, in print and on-line, in Monarch Review, Duct, Forge, Pearl, Brink Magazine, Gemini Magazine, Into The Teeth of the Wind, Sanskrit, Emerson Review, Hawai’i Pacific Review, The Clarion, Bluestem, and Compass Rose.  She was a recipient of the Rosemary Thomas Poetry Prize.

William G. Meffert
William G. Meffert is a surgeon in Vietnam, Iowa, Haiti, Russia, and China, as well as a flight instructor, carpenter, surgical consultant for Stanford University.  He is published in AOPA, The Vietnam Archive, The Evergreen Review, The MacGuffin, and forthcoming issues of Helix Magazine and Ars Medica.

Holly Hendin
Holly is a psychiatrist working in Phoenix. She did her undergraduate education at Wellesley College, her graduate education at UC Davis, and her medical school training at the University of Arizona.  In her poetry she tries to catch and elaborate on those moments that otherwise would slip by quietly.  She hopes that in her poetry she is able to explore the space between the beauty and cruelty of existence.  Her poetry can be found in The Front Range Review, Ginosko, The George Washington Review, and Schuylkill Valley Journal.

Sara Biggs Chaney
Sara Biggs Chaney lives in Vermont and teaches writing at Dartmouth College. She received her Ph.D. in English with a concentration in Composition, Literacy, and Culture from Indiana University in 2008. When she isn’t busy teaching or getting ready to teach, Sara researches representations of Autism. Her poetry and flash fiction have or will appear in Stone Highway Review, Sleet Magazine, Emerge Literary Journal, Right Hand Pointing, Eunoia Review, and elsewhere.

Jennifer Audette
Jennifer Audette has an MS in Audiology which has nothing to do with writing but does pay the bills. She collects feathers that fall from the sky, bleached bones, and treasures washed up by the sea. She studies writing mostly in solitude but sometimes with the folks at The Writer’s Center in White River Junction, VT.  You can find more of her work in the Spring 2013 edition of Fiction Fix.

Nick Kolakowski
Nick Kolakowski’s work has appeared in The Washington Post, McSweeney’s, The Evergreen Review, Satellite Magazine, Carrier Pigeon, and Washington City Paper. His first book, a work of comedic nonfiction titled “How to Become an Intellectual,” was published by Adams Media in 2012.

Phil Carriere
“I received my MFA from the University of South Carolina in 2007. I am married to a beautiful woman 35 years and have two good and grown sons.  I have been publishing poems in the small press magazines and journals since 1996. My work has appeared in Blind Man’s Rainbow, Mid-West Poetry Review, Visions International and others. For the last six years I have taught composition at a two year college in Columbia SC.”