He also edited the books Word Play Place: Essays on the Poetry of John Matthias (Swallow Press, 1998), Vectors: New Poetics (Samizdat Editions, 2001), and co-edited The & Now Awards: The Best Innovative Writing (Lake Forest College Press, 2010). He published the critical book, Laureates and Heretics (University of Notre Dame Press, 2010), and three chapbooks, Another Ireland (Wild Honey Press, 1999), Citation Suite (Wild Honey Press, 1999), and Slight Return: Remix and Ekphrasis (Argotist Press 2011). He has published four books of poetry, Inventions of a Barbarous Age (Madhat Inc, 2016), The Kafka Sutra (Madhat Press, 2015), and Home and Variations (Salt Publishing, 2004), and the collaborative poetry book, Revolutions (Dos Madres Press, 2017), written with John Matthias and Jean Dibble. Robert Archambeau (1996) is a professor at Lake Forest College. He was nominated for the 2011 United States Artist Fellowship and won the 2015 VIDO Award given by Vida, Women in the Literary Arts. He won the Outstanding Latino Cultural Arts, Literary Arts and Publications Award (AAHHE) in 2010, and the Midwestern Voices and Visions Project Residency at the Anderson Center in 2007. Aragón’s translations have appeared in Ariel, Poetry Daily, and Packing House Review. His work has also appeared in Jacket, Chattahoochee Review, Notre Dame Review, Crab Orchard Review, Great River Review, Heliotrope, Terra Incognita, Electronic Poetry Review, Mandorla, Pilgrimage, The Volta, MiPoesias, Origin, Borderlands, and Poetry.
#Luscious jackson and poe how to
His poetry has appeared in The Journal and in the anthologies How to Be This Man (2003), Bend, Don’ t Shatter: Poets on the Beginnings of Desire (2004), Red, White, and Blues: Poets on the Promise of America (2004), Evensong: Contemporary American Poets on Spirituality (2006), Deep Travel: Contemporary American Poets Abroad (2007), Mariposas: Queer Latino Poetry (2008), Helen Burns: New Voices from the Academy (2010), and Full Moon on K Street (2010). Aragón has published two books of poetry, Puerta del Sol (Bilingual Press, 2005) and Glow of Our Sweat (Scapegoat Press, 2010) for which he won the 2nd place International Latino Book Award. He edited the collection The Wind Shifts: New Latino Poetry (University of Arizona Press, 2007). įrancisco Aragón (2003) is the director of Letras Latinas, the literary component of the Institute for Latino Studies at the University of Notre Dame. More information can be found on his personal website. His newest book, Adam’s Stepsons (Amazon Digital Services) was published in April, 2017. He has since published five more books, including Approaching Twi-Night (Kinoshita Kijitsu Press, 2015), Taking Leave: An American on Paternity Leave in Japan (Perceptia Press, 2015), Notes from the Nineties (Kinoshita Kijitsu Press, 2016), and L2 Selves and Motivations in Asian Contexts (Multilingual Matters, 2016). His scholarly articles have appeared in the Journal of Applied Measurement and JALT Journal, and his co-edited book Language Learning Motivation in Japan was released by Multilingual Matters in 2013. Matthew Apple (1997) is the coordinator of the English program at Ritsumeikan University in Kyoto, Japan.
His reviews, poetry, and translations have appeared in Dream Pop Press, Fusion, Notre Dame Review, and Muse/A Journal. Zachary Anderson (2017) is a bookseller at Tattered Cover Book Store in Denver, CO. She has also worked as project editor/coordinator for a book packager in Texas, with Aspen Publishers, and as a freelance copyeditor. Candice Adams (Roma) (2004) is CEO, co-founder, and copywriter at EMuse Creative, a company that subsists on the production of superior web and print graphics for members of the arts and entertainment community.