CONTRIBUTORS
"I've always depended on the kindness of strangers."
- Blanche Dubois
A Streetcar Named Desire
by Tennessee Williams |
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| C | D | E | F
| G | H |
I | J
| K | L | M |N
|O | P | Q | R
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S | T | U | V
| W | X | Y | Z
]
A
Carol
A. Adams [POETRY] grew up
in South-East England. She studied for a year at l'Alliance Francaise in
Paris and later emigrated to Canada. She worked at the Scarborough
Public Library Board for a number of years. A mature graduate of
York University, Carol majored in English and Creative Writing.
[INTERVIEW] Howard
Akler’s novel The City Man (Coach House Books, 2005) is
a punchy mix of pulp fiction, crime noir and prototypical Canadian
literary fiction. It’s set in Toronto in 1934, with the city mired in
the Great Depression.
Jerry
Amernic [INTERVIEW] is a Toronto writer. He published his
first novel, Gift of the Bambino, in 2002. The novel spent
11 years bouncing between agents and editors.
[FICTION] Jennifer
Amey's short fiction has appeared in Pindeldyboz and Eyeshot,
and essays and opinion in *Spark, Hive Magazine, McSweeneys,
and The Globe and Mail. Together with Toronto writer Jill Murray,
she co-founded and co-hosts Itch: the reading series.
Jason
Anderson [INTERVIEW] is the author of Showbiz (ECW Press,
2005). Showbiz creates an alternate universe where a young
journalist named Nathan (a Canuck who lives in New York, even though his
visa has run out) finds an old record by someone named Jimmy Wynn in a
used record store. He takes it home and listens to it and discovers he
was an impersonator of President Cannon, a much-beloved president who
was assassinated in New Orleans in 1963.
Ozdemir
Asaf [POETRY] was born in
Ankara, Turkey, in 1923. His major poetry collections include: Dunya
Kacti Gozume (The World Caught My Eye, 1955), Sen Sen Sen
(You You You, 1956), Cicekleri Yemeyin (Don't Eat The Flowers,
1975), Yalnizlik Paylasilmaz (Loneliness Can't be Shared, 1971)
and Benden Sonra Mutluluk (The happiness After Me, published
posthumously in 1983). In 2001, Asaf's entire works were
re-issued in their original single volume form by Adam Publishing,
Istanbul, to mark the 20th anniversary of the poet’s death.
Thea
Atkinson [FICTION] is a
freelance writer in Nova Scotia obsessed with fiction. She has had
stories in QWERTY, Thought Magazine, Regina
Weese, Vestal Review, Captains of Consciousness, Zygote,
Canadian Stories, Happy, ShyFlowers Garden,
and on CBC radio one. Her website.
B
John Baglow
[REVIEWS] was born in England and emigrated to Canada at the age of two
without too many scars. He is the author of the poetry collections,
Emergency Measures (Sono Nis, 1976) and Journey Under Glass (Penumbra,
2004), as well as a critical study of the Scottish poet Hugh MacDiarmid
(McGill-Queen's, 1987). He has reviewed poetry in a number of journals, and
been published in several as well. Sympathies: labour and the progressive
left. Antipathies: bigotry and bad writing. For more see www.firstwrite.ca.
Aidan
Baker [POETRY, BOOK
REVIEWS, INTERVIEW]
is a Toronto-based writer and musician who has published internationally
in such magazines as Intangible, Stanzas and The
Columbia Review.
Terry
Barker [ESSAYS, AL
PURDY FEATURE] teaches Canadian Studies at Humber College. His
collection of essays After
Acorn: Meditations on the Message of Canada's People's Poet is
published by Mekler & Deahl.
Eric
Barstad [POETRY, REVIEWS] teaches English and
Creative Writing at Augustana University College in Camrose, Alberta.
His work has been published, or is forthcoming, in The Amethyst
Review, The Antigonish Review, Event, Grain, The
Malahat Review, Other Voices, Pottersfield Portfolio, Prairie
Fire, Wascana Review, and Zygote.
John
Barton [INTERVIEW, POEMS]
has written collections of poetry and chapbooks, including Notes
toward a Family Tree (1995 Ottawa Book Award), Designs from the
Interior (1995 Archibald Lampman Award), Sweet Ellipsis (1999
Archibald Lampman Award), and Shroud. His third
book of poetry, West of Darkness: Emily Carr, a self-portrait
(1988 Archibald Lampman Award) was republished in a new and expanded
edition in 1999 by Beach Holme. Barton’s eighth collection, Hypothesis,
was published by House of Anansi Press in 2001.
Michel
Basilieres [BOOK REVIEWS, INTERVIEW] has written for Faux Pas, Way
Station and other journals, and radio drama for the CBC. His first novel, Black
Bird, was released in 2003.
Derek
Beaulieu [SMALL PRESS FEATURE] is proprietor of Housepress.
JC Bellringer
[REVIEW] is a writer living in London, Ontario.
[INTERVIEW]
Jonathan
Bennett’s first novel After
Battersea Park (Raincoast Books) appeared in 2001 to critical
acclaim. His next book, Verandah People, was a collection of short
stories set in Australia.
Roy
Bentley [POETRY] writes:
"My poems have appeared in magazines such as The Southern Review,
The North American Review, The Ohio Review, Shenandoah,
Prairie Schooner and others. I've published two books of
poems: Boy in a Boat (Univ of Alabama, 1986) and Any
One Man (Bottom Dog Books, 1992). I've won Ohio Arts Council
Individual Artist Fellowship awards 5 times--in short, I've been doing
this a while."
Robert
James Berry [POETRY] was born in the UK and now lives in
Auckland, New Zealand. He's been published widely and his first volume, Smoke,
appeared in 2000.
Brooke
Biaz [FICTION] is
co-director of the UK Centre for Creative Writing (Research Through
Practice) and holds the National Book Council Award for New Fiction, the
Premier's Award for New Fiction, and the first doctorate in creative
writing awarded in Australia. A recipient of grants and awards from the
National Endowment, the Arts and Humanities Board and the British
Academy, Brooke can be
contacted, eeeeelly, at g.harper@bangor.ac.uk
Joe
Blades [POETRY] is the publisher of Broken Jaw Press and the
author of River Suite. He lives and writes in Fredericton, New
Brunswick.
Ace
Boggess [POETRY] of Huntington, WV, received his B.A. from
Marshall University and his Juris Doctorate from West Virginia
University. His latest chapbook is Desire's Orchestra (TLD:
1998). His poetry has appeared or will appear soon in Notre Dame
Review, Birmingham Poetry Review, Portland Review, Concho
Review, The Baltimore Review, Potomac Review, Cider
Press Review, Beacon Street Review, and many other journals.
Sarah Bonet
[REVIEW] is a poet, and award-winning playwright and screenwriter. She is
also associated with the MFA program at San Francisco State
University.
Anne
Borden [BOOK REVIEWS, INTERVIEW] lives in Toronto, where she
works as a writer and editor.
Alex
Boyd [BOOK REVIEWS, ESSAY, INTERVIEW] is the host of the
IV lounge reading series in Toronto, Ontario. Alex is a writer of poems,
essays and fiction. His creative writing has appeared in WORD, Ink,
dig, Taddle Creek,
and various other places, while essays and articles have appeared in The
Globe and Mail, Books in Canada, The
Danforth Review, and Quill and Quire. To read some of
Alex’s work, visit his web site: www.alexboyd.com.
Kate
Braid [INTERVIEW] has
published three poetry collections: Covering Rough Ground (1991);
To This Cedar Fountain (1995); and Inward to the Bones:
Georgia O'Keeffe's Journey with Emily Carr (1998), all published by
Polestar. She has also published numerous essays and two books of
non-fiction: Red Bait! co-authored with Al King (Kingbird, 1998);
and Emily Carr: Rebel Artist (XYZ Publishing, 2000). Her poetry
and non-fiction have been widely anthologized. Most recently she edited
The Fish Come in Dancing: Stories from the West-Coast Fishery
(Strawberry Hill, 2002). Her books have won the Pat Lowther and the
VanCity Book Prizes, and been short-listed for the Dorothy Livesay Prize
(BC Book Prizes), the Pat Lowther Prize and the Milton Acorn People's
Poetry Award.
Susan
Briscoe [INTERVIEWER] is currently completing her MA in creative
writing at Concordia University.
[POETRY, BOOK REVIEWS] Stephen
Brokwell's second book, Cometology,
was published by ECW in spring 2001. This poem is from a new manuscript
"The Rage of History". Stephen lives in Ottawa with his family
and works at Autodesk, an automated design company.
Andy
Brown [INTERVIEW] is a Montreal writer and publisher. He is the
co-editor of You & Your Bright Ideas: New Montreal Writing (Véhicule
Press) and Running with Scissors (Cumulus
Press), the latter co-edited with Meg Sircom. He is a contributing
editor for Matrix magazine
and the publisher and founder of Conundrum
Press. I Can See You Being Invisible (DC Books,
2004) is his first book of fiction.
[POETRY] Douglas
Brown's "Rhapsody" won second prize in Matrix's
1998 "End of the World" contest. He teaches at John Abbott
College in Montreal.
Michael
Bryson [BOOK REVIEWS, EDITORIALS, INTERVIEWS] is the publisher
and editor of The Danforth Review. He is the author of two books
of short stories and a servant of the people of Ontario. More
information: michaelbryson.com.
Tony
Burgess [INTERVIEW] lives in Stayner Ontario, with his wife
Rachel Jones and their son, Griffin. He is the author of The
Hellmouths of Bewdley, Pontypool Changes Everything, and Caesarea.
Pontypool has been optioned for a film by Bruce McDonald.
Janet
Buck [POETRY]
teaches writing and literature at the college level. Her poetry and
poetics have appeared in The Melic Review, The Pittsburgh
Quarterly, Kimera, 2River View, Tintern Abbey, Southern
Ocean Review, The Horsethief's Journal and hundreds of
journals world-wide. In 1998 and 1999, she has received numerous
creative writing awards and been a featured poet for Seeker Magazine,
Poetry Today Online, Vortex, Conspire, Poetry
Cafe, Dead Letters, the storyteller, Poetry Heaven,
Athens City Times, Poetik License, 3:00 AM e-zine,
Poetry Super Highway, and Carved in Sand. Newton's Baby
Press published her first print collection entitled Calamity's
Quilt. Janet was one of ten artists to be featured at the "One
Heart, One World" Exhibit at the United Nations Exhibit Hall in New
York City in April, 2000. Her web site is http://www.janetbuck.com
Alan
Butcher
[POETRY] writes: "Books: I remember Haida (military
history), Lancelot Press, and Beer and Ale, McClelland and
Stewart (social history; reissued 2000, by Editio-books); also: mag., advtg copy; ed. nat. trade mag.; writing/producing the Chase
Almanac (Cdn & international editions) for 25 years; Poetry: The
Windsor Review, The Danforth Review." His web site is http://www.writersunion.ca/butcher.htm
C
Gabe
Camozzi [FICTION] was born
on December 19th , 1983 to Daniel Camozzi and Kathleen
O’Connor Camozzi in Montreal, Québec. He attended Cedar Park School,
read a few novels, then went to Loyola High School and read a few more.
He currently searches for depth of meaning at his job as a gas station
attendant (pump monkey), and enjoys the frivolity of debating, acting,
football, eating good food and lying down afterwards. He has previously
been published in the First Fruits literary magazine, as well as
Loyola’s homebrew publication Venture. He is also single.
[INTERVIEW,
POETRY] Melanie
Cameron’s first
book, Holding the Dark (Muses’ Company, 1999), was shortlisted
for the Eileen MacTavish Sykes Award for Best First Book by a Manitoba
Writer. Her second book, wake, will be released by the Muses’
Company in Fall 2003. Melanie is the poetry co-editor of Prairie Fire
magazine and is currently completing her third book-length manuscript.
Jason
Camlot [INTERVIEW]
E.J.
Carson [POETRY] received
his M.A. in English before joining General Publishing/Stoddart as an
Editor in 1980. There he rose to the position of Publisher in the newly
formed Stoddart Publishing line. Moving to Random House Canada in 1985
as VP Publishing, he began and developed over the next six years that
company's very successful Canadian publishing list. He has edited and
published many well known authors such as Carol Shields, Dennis Lee, Eli
Mandel, Leon Rooke, David Suzuki, and John Ralston Saul, and launched
several successful book series such as New Press Canadian Classics,
Spectrum Poetry, and the Canadian Living Cookbooks. In 1991 he joined
the newly formed HarperCollins Canada, eventually rising to the position
of President. This was followed in 1999 when he joined Pearson Education
Canada as President of its newly formed trade division, Pearson PTR
Canada. Ed Carson has published one book of poetry, Scenes
(Porcupine's Quill).
T.
Anders Carson [POETRY, BOOK
REVIEWS] has published poetry in 16 countries. He lives and writes in
Portland, Ontario.
Lauren
Carter [POETRY] writes:
"My work has been published in unherd, Another
Toronto Quarterly, Grain, Event, CV2, Adbusters
magazine and other publications. I was short-listed for the 2001 This
Magazine Great Canadian Literary Hunt and the 2002 Best New Writer
Creative Non-Fiction contest. Recently, I've been completing a
collection of poetry with funding from the Ontario Arts Council."
Graham
Catt [POETRY] is a South Australian writer of poetry, short
stories and children's fiction. His work has been published in numerous
magazines and journals around Australia including The Weekend
Australian, Quadrant, Famous Reporter, LiNQ, The
Canberra Times and Verandah. He has also been widely published
on the World Wide Web in such e-zines as Disquieting Muses (US), Limestone
Magazine (UK), The 2River View (US), Southern Ocean Review
(NZ) and Carve Magazine (US). His recent publications are Shooting
Stars (poetry; Ginninderra Press 2001, and Blue: Friendly Street
27 (poetry anthology; co-edited with K*m Mann; Wakefield Press
2003).
Roy
Challis [POETRY] of North
Battleford, Saskatchewan, is a superannuated teacher of literary and
theatre arts, as well as a part-time writer/performance artist.
Jean-Gérald
Charbonneau [FICTION]
writes: "Stories of mine have been published in Stop, Liberté
and The Nashwaak Review, and I write book reviews for AGNI,
the Boston Book Review, Toronto Star, Denver Post, Cleveland
Plain Dealer, and other newspapers. Originally from Montreal, I
received an MA degree in creative writing from Boston University in 1998
after studying literature and writing at the University of Southern
Mississippi."
Jose
Chaves [POETRY] writes:
"I am currently living in Bogota, Colombia on a Fulbright
Scholarship putting together an anthology of the Latinamerican prose
poem and mini-story. When I am not in Colombia, I live in Portland,
Oregon where I teach Spanish and creative writing. I have an MFA from
the University of Oregon and have been published in Highbeams, Octavo,
Jeopardy, among others."
Brandon
Cole [FICTION] writes: "I am a writer/director living in
Brooklyn, New York. I have written, co-written, directed, or produced
five independent feature films: MAC and ILLUMINATA,
co-written with John Turturro; SONS and the recently released 13 MOONS,
co-written with Alexandre Rockwell; and OK GARAGE, which I wrote and
directed that starred Lili Taylor, John Turturro, and Will Patton. The
High-Heeled Shoe is a story about a movie that did not get
made." Read an interview
with Brandon.
Sari
Colt [FICTION] writes: "I am a
thirty-something Toronto based-writer. "Disco Inferno" is my
first published effort. My areas of interest include traveling and
spirituality. Future plans include writing some non-fiction pieces, a
novel, and possibly a short film. I am very excited to be part of The
Danforth Review."
Pino
Coluccio [POETRY] lives in
Toronto, where he was born in 1973 to parents who immigrated from
Buonalbergo, a town in the province of Benevento, Italy, in 1958. His
work has won a few small prizes and once appeared in Descant
magazine.
Tim
Conley [FICTION, POETRY, INTERVIEW] lives in Kingston,
Ontario. He is the reviews editor at the online journal paperplates.
His fiction, poetry, essays, and translations have appeared in many
journals, including PRISM international, The Midwest Quarterly,
Queen Street Quarterly, and fillingStation. His chapbook The
Mirror was published by BookThug. He is the author of Joyces
Mistakes.
Geoff
Cook [POETRY, BOOK REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS]
teaches English at John Abbott
College outside Montreal. His debut poetry collection, Postscript
(Signal 2004), was shortlisted for the 2005 Gerald Lampert Memorial
Award.
Gregory
M. Cook [INTERVIEW], a journalist, former teacher and arts
administrator, and one of three poets in his immediate family, has made
writers and their survival a professional and personal study, which
includes his biography of a close friend of twenty years, One
Heart One Way / Alden Nowlan: a writer’s life (Pottersfield Press,
2003). Cook served as the charter chair of the Nova Scotia Writers’
Council, Chair of the Writers’ Union of Canada, board member of the
League of Canadian Poets and Writers’ Development Trust, and first
secretary of the Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (now Access
Copyright).
Reid
Cooper [POETRY] is an Ottawa-born lawyer now with the Department
of Foreign Affairs and International Trade. Most of his publications are
hyper-dry public policy stuff, although his poetry has appeared in the Carleton
Literary Review and Ottawa's (now-defunct) The Skinny.
Danielle Couture
[INTERVIEWS] is a poet and staff writer with The Danforth Review.
Corin
Cummings [FICTION] is from Vermont and lives in Toronto.
"Night Support," the novella from which this piece is
excerpted is available online from Wind
River Press. Cummings was nominated for the Pushcart Prize in 2003
for his story "Biking
Distance". His work has also appeared in the Mississippi
Review and Tatlin's Tower.
More of his work can be found at www.onewordlowercase.com.
Lynda
Curnoe [FICTION] has been published by Ergo Books,
Lyricalmyrical Press, Open Letter, The Literary Review of
Canada, Psychic Rotunda and The London Reader.
D
Jennifer
Dales [BOOK REVIEWS] is a writer living in Ottawa.
[INTERVIEW]
Peter Darbyshire's
first book, Please: A Novel, was published in 2002 by Raincoast
Books. Darbyshire describes Please as "kind of like a season
of 'Friends,' written by ... Bret Easton Ellis." Please
won the 2003 ReLit Award for best novel.
Craig
Davidson [INTERVIEW] is the author of Rust and Bone, a
new story collection of full of dog fighting, sex addicts, boxers and
magicians.
Joe
Davies [FICTION] is a stay at home dad and
part-time catering chef. His work has appeared in Pottersfield
Portfolio, Filling Station, the Wascana Review and the
New Quarterly. When he was a kid it was his face on the box of
Pablum.
James
Deahl [AL PURDY FEATURE] was a personal friend of such People's
Poets as Al Purdy, Milton Acorn, Dorothy Livesay, and Ted Plantos. Deahl
is the author of over a dozen books and chapbooks, most recently Blackbirds:
war poems; Under The Watchful Eye; and Tasting The Winter
Grapes, which won Hamilton's Award of Excellence. http://www.meklerdeahl.com.
[INTERVIEW]
John Degen's
debut poetry collection, Animal Life in Bucharest was published
in May 2000 by Pedlar Press, and a new collection Killing
Things was published in 2002. He has recently completed a novel, The
Uninvited Guest, about totalitarianism, hockey, and the
anecdotal history of backgammon, set in Romania and Canada. More info: http://www.poets.ca/linktext/direct/degen.htm.
Shawna
Dempsey [INTERVIEW] and Lorri Millan have created a prolific
body of performance art, print publications, video and film. Their
most recent text, the Lesbian National Parks and Services
Field Guide to North America (2002, Pedlar Press) is a
thought-provoking, uproarious send-up of the field guide genre.
Barry
Dempster [POETRY] is the
author of seven poetry collections, including Fire and Brimstone
(Empyreal Press) and The Salvation of Desire (St. Thomas Press).
His New & Selected Poems, The Words Wanting Out, will be
published by Nightwood Editions in September 2003.
Anthony
De Sa [FICTION] is from Toronto where he lives with his wife and
three boys. He is on sabbatical from teaching and is currently working
on his first collection of short stories, Fado.
Jason
Dewinetz [SMALL PRESS FEATURE] is proprietor of Greenboathouse
Books.
Richard
di Santo [BOOK REVIEW] studied literature and philosophy at the
University of Toronto. He is working on a collection of essays on
literary theory and alchemy.
Andrew
Dits [POETRY] is a senior at Trinity
School at Greenlawn in South Bend, Indiana, where he started “The
Trinity Review”. He began writing under the tutelage of Brother Paul
Quenon (who studied poetry with Thomas Merton) at the Abbey of
Gethsemani in Kentucky. Andrew has had poems published in six journals
and in the collection, "Monkskript", edited by Quenon, which
included a piece by Seamus Heaney. Coincidentally, Andrew read “The
Picking” for a Fine Arts Fellowship competition at Wabash College in
Indiana the same weekend TDR posted the poem. Update ...
Andrew writes: "The competition at Wabash College went very well. I
took first place." E
Sharon
Eberhardt [FICTION] writes: "When I
was a child other kids were hoarding their pennies for candy or the
latest 'Archie' comic books. I waited with baited breath for "Tales
from the Crypt" or my favorite, "The Twilight Zone". I
would rush to the store just as the delivery man arrived and buy the
latest edition. Rod Serling was a hero to me. Not just because he wrote
stories that made me gasp and kept me glued to the TV on Friday night,
but because I knew that surprise. . .that certain 'twist' at the end of
his story, would delight and terrify me. I read everything he wrote and
Ray Bradbury came in as a close second. As a writer, I never took myself
seriously until I was recently published as 'featured author' in a
magazine. With a wonderful daughter to raise and a nursing career, I
rarely had time to indulge in my favorite playtime. Writing! Because of
Mr. Serling's wonderful work, I try to fashion my stories after him. At
least most of them. I spun this little tale for my daughter, Ravonna,
who has always been my inspiration because of her faith in me. I hope
you enjoy it as she did. I think there's a Twilight Zone in everything
around us...if we look deep enough and let our imaginations soar as Mr.
Serling did. Enjoy!"
Keith
Ebsary [FICTION, BOOK REVIEWS] has
published fiction or poetry in Bywords, Zygote, Blue
Moon, Filling Station, Litwit Review, It's
Still Winter, others. He works as translator in Québec
City and is a great fan of Jesus.
Crispin
Elsted [SMALL PRESS FEATURE] is proprietor of Barbarian
Press.
F
[POETRY] Mark
Featherstone's poems have appeared (or will soon appear) in Arc,
The Mandrake Poetry Review, HMS Beagle, ChiZine, Playing
in the Mud? (chapbook anthology from Over the Moon Press) and Let
Yourself Go (anthology, Black Moss Press). He lives with his wife
and two sons in Montreal West, and is a biologist at McGill University.
Richard
Fein [POETRY] has been published in numerous print and web
journals. He also have an interest in digital photography. He has three
personal websites where he’s posted sample of his work: http://hometown.aol.com/bardofbyte/myhomepage/index.html,
http://www.pbase.com/bardofbyte,
http://expage.com/page/richardspoems.
Mona
Fertig [SMALL PRESS FEATURE] is proprietor of (M)othertongue
Press.
Jon
Paul Fiorentino [INTERVIEW] is a Transcona/Winnipeg poet living
in Montreal where he is an editor for Matrix magazine. Transcona
fragments (Cyclops Press, 2002) is his second collection of poetry.
Misha
Firer [FICTION] was born in 1979 in Ulyanovsk, Russia. He lived
in Tel Aviv, Amsterdam, New York and currently resides in Oakland,
California. His stories have appeared in Ascent, BIG News,
City Writers, In Posse Review, Laundry Pen, Nuvein,
Paumanok Review, Pink Chameleon, Rose & Thorn, Scarlet
Letters, Skive, Slow Trains, Taint, Tryst,
Vestal Review, Word Riot and Ululation.
Fresh
Meat was the image Matthew
Firth [BOOK REVIEWS, INTERVIEW, SMALL
PRESS FEATURE] chose for the title of his first book of short
stories (Rush Hour Revisions, 1997). Packed with gritty realism and
pared back prose, that booked helped to strike back at the lyrical
pastoralism that seeped into Canadian literature during the past decade.
Firth has helped to encourage a new tone for literary writing in Canada
by publishing chapbooks, two different literary magazines, and his own
growing oeuvre of tell-it-like-it-is short stories. His latest book
is Can You Take Me There, Now?,
published in September 2001.
Diana
Fitzgerald Bryden [BOOK REVIEWS, INTERVIEW] is the author of Learning
Russian (Mansfield Press, 2000), which was nominated for the Pat
Lowther Award. Her second book of poetry, Clinic Day, will be
published by Brick Books in 2004. She's working on a novel, Mealtime,
and a third collection of poetry, Self Help. She writes freelance
reviews and essays. DFB's poems appear most recently in Lost in the
Archives (Alphabet City Media) and Short Fuse, a Global Anthology
of New Fusion Poetry, Rattapallax Press.
Elyse
Friedman [INTERVIEW]
Laurie
Fuhr [BOOK REVIEWS] has poems in the anthologies Shadowy
Technicians: New Ottawa Poets (Broken Jaw 2000) and evergreen:
six new poets (Black Moss 2002). She edits Blue
Moon (email bluemoonbooks@yahoo.ca).
G
[FICTION] Avital
Gad-Cykman's work has been published or is forthcoming in Glimmer
Train, Prism International, Other Voices, Happy,
Stand Magazine, AIM Quarterly, The Bridge, Gargoyle
Magazine, The Binnacle and other publications. It has also
appeared online in Salon, Zoetrope All-story Extra, Salt
Hill Review, 3am, In-Posse Review and elsewhere. Her
story collection was one of the six finalists for Iowa Fiction Award.
Jason
Gallagher [POETRY] is the
author of a number of poetry chapbooks. He lives and writes in Montreal,
Quebec. His web site is www.jasongallagher.com.
[FICTION] Julia
Gaunce's novel Rocket Science was published by Pedlar
Press. She is working on her next book.
Rosalind
Gill [POETRY]
teaches at York University in Toronto.
[FICTION, INTERVIEW]
In his first collection of short stories, How
Did You Sleep? (Porcupine’s Quill, 2000), Ottawa writer Paul
Glennon eschews dirty
realism and thinly-veiled autobiography for clever conceits and
absurdly-extended metaphors. In one story, the president of a
corporation is voted out of power by his executive board, which then
votes unanimously to change him into a bear.
Douglas
Glover [INTERVIEW] was born and raised on a tobacco farm in
southwestern Ontario and now lives just outside Saratoga Springs, New
York. He is the author of four novels, four short story collections,
including 16 Categories of Desire,
and a book of essays, Notes Home from a Prodigal Son. His book of
stories, A Guide to Animal Behaviour, was a finalist for the
Governor General's Award. His stories have appeared in Best American
Short Stories, Best Canadian Short Stories, and The New
Oxford Book of Canadian Stories. His criticism has appeared in the Globe
and Mail, Montreal Gazette, New York Times Book Review,
Washington Post Book World and Los Angeles Times. He has a
background in philosophy and journalism, and attended the University of
Iowa's Iowa Writers Workshop. His 2003 novel, Elle,
won the Governor General's Award.
Erin Gouthro
[REVIEW, INTERVIEW] is the Poetry Reviews Editor with The Danforth Review.
She lives at the edge of the world (or outside the GTA), with her
husband, a cat, and a border-collie and is currently attending
journalism school at Ryerson University.
Jen
Gouthro [FICTION] was born and raised in
Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. She presently lives and works in Toronto. She
writes a weekly newspaper column for the Cape Breton Post entitled
"A View from Away" about her experiences as a "small-town
girl living in the big city."
Catherine
Graham [POETRY, INTERVIEW] is the author of the
critically acclaimed chapbook The
Watch (reviewed in TDR). She returned to her native Canada in 2000
after living in Northern Ireland for many years where she completed an
M.A. in Creative Writing in Poetry. Her poems have been anthologized,
broadcasted on BBC Radio Ulster and have appeared in such literary
journals as The Fiddlehead, Poetry Ireland Review, The
Danforth Review and Books Ireland. Catherine is also included
in The White Page / An Bhileog Bhan: Twentieth Century Irish Women
Poets. A Burlington teacher and workshop leader, Catherine is the
creator of Words@work, a communications seminar for businesses.
Insomniac Press published Catherine's first full poetry
collection, Pupa, fall 2003. Visit Catherine's website: www.catherinegraham.com.
Terence
M. Green [INTERVIEW, CANADIAN
SF&F FEATURE], a former high-school English teacher, is the
author of seven books. Green's tales blur the lines between science
fiction and magic realism. Green's web site is www.tmgreen.com.
Darren
Greer [BOOK REVIEWS] is a Nova Scotia-born writer living in
Toronto. His newest novel, Still Life with June, was released by
Cormorant Books in 2003.
Silas
Grey [FICTION], nearing the end of a checkered career, has only
recently turned his lifelong love affair with words toward writing short
stories. He finds inspiration on daily rambles in the hills, forests and
moorlands of Wales in the UK. This is his first story to be accepted for
publication.
Dan
Grossman [POETRY] writes: "I'm a returned Peace Corps
volunteer (Niger '92-94) currently living in Indianapolis, Indiana. I've
been published in pLopLop (www.pLopLop.com)
and Flying Island. I have work forthcoming in Yefief. I
also have a chapbook of poems entitled Kilohertz Country out with
Geekspeak Unique Press, the publishers of pLopLop."
H
Jane
Halpern [FICTION] lives with her family on
an Appalachian hill farm and occasionally cruises on the small sail boat
Morgan Truce.
Lori
Hahnel [BOOK REVIEWS] is a Calgary writer and reviewer
whose short fiction has appeared in Cyber Oasis and The Amethyst Review
and who is completing her first novel.
Steven
Hansen [FICTION] is a contributing editor for www.smallspiralnotebook.com
and Ink Pot literary journal. He grew up in Iowa, served in the
Navy in California and now finds himself in New Mexico with a beautiful
wife who loves whales. He's had stories published on the Web in Samsara
Quarterly, FRiGG Magazine and The Paumanok Review. You
can contact him at namjimbo@hotmail.com.
Ted
Harms [BOOK REVIEWS] is a philosopher who lives in Waterloo,
Ontario.
Erina
Harris [INTERVIEW] has been
published in literary journals across the country, including: ARC,
Grain, The Fiddlehead, Other Voices, CV2, Ink
Magazine, and Exile. A member of the League of Canadian
Poets, she is continuing to refine her metaphysics and experimental
aesthetics. She was short-listed in the 2000 Bronwen Wallace Memorial
Award. In 1997 Erina put out a chapbook of her poems the 82 short
poems of eliza (Circus Press).
Renée
Hartleib [FICTION] is a writer living in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Her fiction has appeared in The Antigonish Review and is
forthcoming in The New Quarterly and Carousel.
Kenneth
J. Harvey [INTERVIEW] has worked as an assistant film editor, graphic
designer, magazine editor, short order cook, trade show promoter and amusement park manager. His editorials appear frequently in numerous magazines and newspapers, including
Globe & Mail, National Post, Ottawa Citizen,
Vancouver Province, Halifax Daily News and Toronto
Star. In 2000, he founded The ReLit
Awards. The ReLits (short for Regarding Literature, Reinventing Literature, Relighting Literature...) promote
books published by independent Canadian publishers. Harvey has held the post of Writer in Residence at both the University of New Brunswick and Memorial University.
Joelene
Heathcote [INTERVIEW] is a graduate from the University of British
Columbia with a Masters degree in Fine Arts. Her poetry has been
published internationally and is included in the anthologies Breaking
the Surface and Mocambo
Nights. She has received numerous literary awards for fiction,
non-fiction, and poetry, including: Arc magazine's Poem of the
Year, the Ray Burrell Award, This magazine's Great Canadian
Literary Hunt and the Best New Writer Prize.
Tom
Henihan [ESSAY] was born in Limerick City, Ireland and
immigrated to Canada in 1982. He has lived between southern Alberta and
Vancouver Island for the past 17 years. He has read his work at many of
the major venues across Canada and been a resident at the Leighton
Artists studios at the Banff Centre for the arts in 1995, 1997 and 1998.
Henihan's first collection of poetry Between the Streets was
published in 1992. His second book A Mortar of Seeds published by
Ekstasis Editions was nominated for a Writers Guild of Alberta Award in
1998. In 2002, he published a hand-printed limited edition Almost
Forgotten with Frog Hollow
Press. His fourth collection A Further Exile was published in
fall 2002, also with Ekstasis Editions. Subsequent to the publication of
Almost Forgotten, he became poetry editor with Frog Hollow Press.
Eben
Hensby [POETRY] writes: "I currently am in grade 12 at
Moscrop Secondary School in Burnaby, BC. I have been writing poems for
four years now, but only seriously for one. I am an aspiring poet,
trying to build up a publishing history and to get a book published. I
have previously had some of my work published in IN 2 PRINT magazine,
I've won an essay contest on Leonardo da Vinci, I won the Burnaby
Writing contest twice (once with a French poem and once with a short
story), and I've received several certificates from my school for
Excellence In Writing."
Joy
Hewitt Mann [FICTION, BOOK REVIEWS] is the
author of Clinging to Water,
a collection of short fiction (Boheme Press, 2000).
[POETRY] Iain
Higgins's poems have appeared in Antigonish Review, Books
in Canada, Canadian Forum, Canadian Literature, The
Fiddlehead, Malahat Review, and Prism International.
His translations of contemporary Polish poetry have been published in
numerous magazines in Canada, the UK, Ireland, and the United States,
including Descant, London Magazine, Metre, and Chicago
Review. His translation of Adam Czerniawski's Selected Poems
appeared in 2000.
Karen
Hines [INTERVIEW] is the creator/performer of the award-winning
solo shows Pochsy's Lips, and Oh, baby (Pochsy's Adventures by
the Sea), and Citizen Pochsy, which have toured across North
America and in Europe.
Harold
Hoefle [BOOK REVIEWS,
INTERVIEWS]. His short story manuscript-in-progress won the
runner-up prize for the David Adams Richard Award 2003. He published a
chapbook, Spray Job, with Black
Bile Press. He lives in
Montreal, Quebec.
[FICTION] Hannah
Holborn's fiction is forthcoming in Room of One's Own, Girls
with Insurance and The Avatar Review and has appeared in Front
& Centre, Room of One's Own (issue 24:4), Words literary
journal and Sights Unseen: New Writing From British Columbia. She
is writing a novel.
Stories by Bruce
Holland Rogers [FICTION] have won a Pushcart Prize, the World
Fantasy Award, and two Nebula Awards, among other honors. He teaches
fiction writing for the Whidbey Writers low-residency MFA, and also
teaches writing seminars in Greece (www.write-in-crete.com)
and Italy (www.write-across-europe.com).
Subscribers from all over the world receive his newest stories by
e-mail. See www.shortshortshort.com.
He recently lived near the St. Clair subway station in Toronto, but now
resides in Eugene, Oregon.
Michael
Holmes [INTERVIEW] is not on steroids. His writing doesn’t put
you to sleep with its suffocating grip. No, the author of Watermelon
Row and 21
Hotels is feeling just fine ... and right now, on
these very pages, The Danforth Review is calling him out! Ladies and
gentlemen, from the hipster district of Can-Lit, will you please shut
the hell up long enough for us to introduce, from Toronto, Canada, the
centre of the universe, the reigning and defending, author of Parts
Unknown, Canada’s Writer-in-Ring-Resident, Mr. Michael Holmes.
Nalo
Hopkinson [INTERVIEW] is a Toronto-based speculative fiction
writer. She has published a collection of short stories, some plays, two
novels, and an anthology or two. Her short story collection Skin Folk
won the Sunburst Award for Canadian fiction of the fantastic, 2003. TDR
caught up with her while she was on tour promoting her new book, The
Salt Roads (2003, Warner Books). See more about Nalo at: http://www.sff.net/people/nalo/
James
Hörner [INTERVIEW] is the editor of the Online
Guide to Writing in Canada.
Janina
Hornosty [FICTION] lives and works in Nanaimo, BC. She has
published one collection of short fiction, Snackers (Oolichan,
1997).
Recent pieces by David
Hunter Sutherland [POETRY] have appeared in The American
Literary Review, The Hollins Critic, The Northern Michigan
Journal, The Reader (Oxford University), The Cortland
Review and The Midwest Quarterly. Recent awards include a
Pushcart Nomination, and he has a second collection scheduled to be
published by Archer Books / Cadmus Editions later in 1999. Finally, he
serves as managing editor for a not-for-profit publication called Recursive
Angel.
Meghan
Hurley [INTERVIEWS] is a journalism student at Ryerson
University. She has done freelance work for various publications across
the province and is very interested in political reporting. In 2004, she
was an Editor for McClung's Magazine, Ryerson's feminist voice for
women.
Linda
Hutsell-Manning [POETRY]
was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba in 1940. Attended school in Manitoba and
Ontario, graduated from Toronto Teachers College, taught in a Southern
Ontario one-room school. BA from University of Guelph in 1975; first
published in 1981. Author of seven children's books/plays, TVOntario
scripts, short fiction/ poetry in Canadian literary magazines and
anthologies. Gives readings/workshops across Canada and in 1998, in
Coburg, Germany and Luxembourg. Lives in Cobourg with husband, James.
Has three grown children and three grandchildren. Her web site is www.nexicom.com/~lman
~
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