Issue 120 Contributors

 

Morgan Cross lives, writes, and practices acupuncture as a settler on traditional and unceded Sc’ianew, Lekwungen, and W̱SÁNEĆ territories, colonially known as Victoria, British Columbia. Her stories and poems have appeared in The Malahat Review, PRISM international, Room, and more.

Beth Dulin’s writing has been published in The American Journal of Poetry, Atlanta Review, Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Gargoyle, Little Patuxent Review, New Directions for Women, New York Quarterly, and Wigleaf, among others. She is the author and co-creator of Truce, a limited-edition artists’ book, in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum and the Museum of Modern Art. A graduate of The New School, she lives on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. Visit her online: https://www.bethdulin.com/

Catherine Gewertz has been a garage band singer, pie baker, cocktail waitress and newspaper reporter. She's an inaugural member of Pride Poets, a troupe of queer poets who compose on-demand poems for strangers on the streets of Los Angeles, using vintage typewriters. Catherine is a graduate of Stanford University. Her work appears in Quartet, Stone Poetry QuarterlyRaw Art Review, True Chili and Altadena Literary Review, among others.

Anne Graue (she/her) is the author of a full-length poetry collection, Full and Plum-Colored Velvet, (Woodley Press) and a chapbook, Fig Tree in Winter (Dancing Girl Press). Her work has appeared in Gargoyle, Verse Daily, Poet Lore, Feral, Canary, The Ilanot Review, Leon Literary Review, SWWIM Every Day, The Museum of Americana, Alice Says Go Fuck Yourself, Anthropocene Poetry Journal, and Mom Egg Review. She is a poetry editor for The Westchester Review.

Shannon Guglielmo is a poet and math teacher in New York City. Her recent work is featured in Last Stanza Poetry JournalNeologism Poetry JournalRight Hand Pointing and Bombay Literary Magazine. She is a Math for America Master Teacher and a recipient of the Fund for Teachers Fellowship.

Indovina is a moniker for Michael Indovina (he/him), a bisexual poet and artist from New Jersey. He is a senior undergraduate student at Drew University, double majoring in English (with a concentration in Creative Writing) and Studio Art, while also minoring in Theatre Arts. Indovina's writing can be found in Fruitslice, Milk Press, and Chill Mag. His Instagram is @indovina_poetry. 

KB (they/them) is a queer farmer and poet based on unceded Chinhook land, otherwise known as Portland, Oregon. KB grew up in a rural town in Oregon and has used poetry and storytelling to grapple with parts of life and gender they didn’t understand as a young queer person without community. Their work can be found in Bel Esprit Literary Paper and the 2024 Trans Farmers for Trans Farmers zine and their instagram @chronicallykb.

Jill Kitchen’s work appears or is forthcoming in Crab Creek Review, The Dodge, Ecotone, Hooligan Magazine, The Iowa Review, The Night Heron Barks, The Penn Review, Poet Lore, Ran Off With the Star Bassoon, Split Lip Magazine, trampset, West Trade Review, and elsewhere. Her work has been nominated for Best New Poets and Best Small Fictions. She lives in Washington, D.C. Instagram: @msjillkitchen Bluesky: @jillkitchen.bsky.social

Rachyl Nyoka (she/her) is a highly sensitive biracial Black poet, visual artist, and licensed psychotherapist. Her visual work has appeared in The Hopper Magazine and FERAL. She lives in the Blue Ridge Mountains with her husband, son, and three feline familiars. You can find more of her artwork at www.rachylnyoka.art.

Sara Lynne Puotinen lives in Minneapolis near the Mississippi River Gorge where she conducts experiments in writing while moving, moving while writing, and doing both while losing her central vision to a degenerative eye disease. Her poetry has appeared in The Account, Door is a Jar, Harpy Hybrid Review, Last Syllable Lit and more.

Cheryl Snell’s books include several poetry collections and novels. Her most recent writing has appeared in Blink-Ink, Eunoia Review, BULL, Ink Sweat &Tears, MacQueen’s Quinterly, and other journals. She has work in several anthologies including a Best of the Net, and has been nominated ten times for Best Small Fictions, the Pushcart, and BOTN. A classical pianist, she lives in Maryland with her husband, a mathematical engineer.

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