BWR & BWR!

Black Warrior Review 34.2

Beth Bachmann's poems have recently appeared in American Poetry Review, Gulf Coast, Kenyon Review, and Best New Poets 2007. She teaches creative writing at Vanderbilt University.

Mary Jo Bang's fifth collection of poems, Elegy, was published by Graywolf Press in October 2007. She's a professor of English and director of the creative writing program at Washington University in St. Louis.

Ashley Capps is not sure what she is doing. Her first book of poems, Mistaking the Sea for Green Fields, was published in 2006 by the University of Akron Press. New poems are in Granta 100, and are forthcoming in Columbia Poetry Review.

Brittney Carman was born on a pig farm in southern Idaho. An MFA candidate in creative nonfiction at the University of Idaho, she writes and teaches now in the panhandle of the state.

Steve Davenport, the creative nonfiction editor of Ninth Letter, is the author of Uncontainable Noise. His "Murder on Gasoline Lake," published in BWR 33.1, is listed as a Notable Essay in Best American Essays 2007 and will soon be published in a chapbook by New American Press.

Maya Hayuk's work can range from tender mockeries of idealized social rituals as hot tubbing or undressing, to transcendent portrayals of geometries giving way to nature. She is a muralist, photographer, printmaker, painter, curator, player of records, writer, performer, collector of stuff, Barnstormer, videographer, documentarian and lover of life who lives in Brooklyn, New York by way of San Francisco, Baltimore, Boston, and Toronto.

< 1 2 3 4 >

©2007 BWR - Web: B.Oliu - Photos: J.Hawkins