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The Antigonish Review

Contributors

James Adamson lives in Manitoba and has published two books. This is his first appearance in The Antigonish Review.

Alex Barr's work has appeared in The Rialto, Poetry Wales, and the new series of Stand. He also has a collection, Letting In The Carnival, published by Peterloo.   top

Fred Biggar is a Canadian living in Melbourne, Australia. His poems have appeared in The Fiddlehead, Southerly and the Allegheny Review. From 1996 to 1998 he lived in Beijing, China.  

Daniel A. Boland lives and writes in Ottawa, Ontario.    top

Michael Bradford's poetry has appeared in such magazines as DESCANT, Windsor Review, Pottersfield Portfolio and ARIEL.   

Holly Borgerson Calder is a partner in a used bookstore in Saskatoon. Her work has appeared in Queen Street Quarterly, Grain, Amethyst Review, NeWest Review, Greenboathouse Books and in a chapbook called Chickweed with four other Western Canadian female poets.   top

Rebecca Campbell lives in Cobble Hill, BC. Her work has appeared in The Fiddlehead and will appear in Grain and Wasana Review. Aaron Crippen is a poet at the University of Houston. Some of his recent work can be found in The Antigonish Review (120), Renditions, and Hanging Loose. He is currently translating the Tao te Ching.   

Sheldon Currie is the author of The Glace Bay Miners Museum and other short stories. He is a regular contributor to The Antigonish Review.   top

Michael deBeyer graduated with a Masters degree in English from the University of New Brunswick. His poetry has appeared in several Canadian literary journals. He currently lives in Fredericton, NB.   

Kelli Deeth recently graduated from the master's program in creative writing at UBC. Her story Pet The Spider appeared in a recent addition of The Dalhousie Review. Also, her story collection, Niagara Falls, will be published by Harper Collins in 2001. Sohrab H. Fracis is the 1999-2000 Florida Individual Artist Fellowship recipient in Literature/Fiction. He teaches English at the University of North Florida, is Fiction and Poetry Editor with State Street Review and proofreader for Kalliope. His short story collection Ticket to Minto: Stories of India and America has won the Iowa Short Fiction Award for 2001 and will be published late this fall by the University of Iowa Press.   top

Tom Henighan has published a novel (Harper-Collins), two collections of stories, poetry, and non-fiction, including books on Canadian culture. The MacLean's Guide to Canadian Arts, Culture and Entertainment was published in 2000.   

Andrew Hewitt grew up in Toronto and now lives with his wife and two children in Cambridge, England. His work has appeared in Prism and Literary Review.   top

Clare Higgins received her Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the City University of New York in 1985, and has worked as a teacher, translator and actor. She grew up in the Bronx, New York and currently lives in Westchester, where she is at work on several short stories and essays.   top

Adrienne Ho is a poet who recently completed an ARCT diploma in piano performance. Her work has appeared in or is forthcoming from Bywords, The Claremont Review, Contemporary Verse 2, and the Malahat Review. She received third place in the prose poem category of the 12th Short Grain Contest.   

Bill Howell has three published poetry collections: The Red Fox (McClelland & Stewart, 1971); In A White Shirt (Black Moss, 1982); and Moonlight Saving Time (Wolsak & Wynn, 1990). Originally from Halifax, he has for many years produced and directed radio plays for the CBC in Toronto, where he's currently Executive Producer of The Mystery Project. These poems are from a new manuscript, Polio Snowshoes.   top

Carole Langille's last book, In Cannon Cave, was nominated for a Governor General's Award in 1997 and the Atlantic Poetry Prize in 1998. She is currently completing another book of poems.   

Marilyn Lerch's first collection of poems, A Far Coming, is out and about seeking publication. A short book of poems about shepherding called Lambs & Llamas, Ewes and Me will be published soon by Springbank Press, Alberta. She lives in Sackville, New Brunswick.   top

David Luhn holds degrees from Stetson University, Brandeis University, and the Iowa Writer's Workshop. He has been a guest at Yaddo. At present, he lives and works in Wellesley, Massachusetts.   

Shane Patrick Mahoney is Chief Researcher for The Inland Fish & Wildlife Division of the Department Forest Resources in The Government of Newfoundland & Laborador. His poetry has been presented on CBC radio.   top

Paddy McCallum's work has appeared previously in The Antigonish Review, as well as in the anthology On The Threshold: Writing Toward The Year 2000 (A Porcepic Book: Beach Holme Publishing Ltd., 1999), and in many other Canadian literary periodicals. A selection of poems, To Its Very Tip The Body Is Snow, is forthcoming from Beach Holme in Fall of 2000.   

Susan McCaslin is a poet and instructor of English at Douglas College in Coquitlam, BC. Her published volumes of poetry include Locutions and Light Housekeeping (Ekstasis Editions), Letters to William Blake (Mother Tongue Press) and Veil/Unveil (The St. Thomas Poetry Series). She has three books of poetry forthcoming this year.   top

Steve McOrmond is a graduate of the Creative Writing Program at the University of New Brunswick. His poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in a number of Canadian literary journals including The Antigonish Review, Event, Fiddlehead, Malahat Review and Queen's Quarterly. He lives in Toronto.   

Judith Maclean Miller lives in Waterloo, Ontario. She teaches Canadian Literature and Creative Writing (among other things). This is her third appearance in The Antigonish Review.   top

Richard Norman Jr. is a student at the University of King's College, in Halifax. He is attempting a novel.   

Christian Riegel is an educator and writer who currently lives in Regina. His work has appeared in or is forthcoming in The Gaspereau Review, New Delta Review, Prairie Fire and The Wascana Review. He has also published two critical book-length studies on Canadian literary topics.   top

Bonnie Sallans is a poet, mother, and doctoral candidate. She lives in Madoc, Ontario where she is completing her dissertation in European History for McMaster University. Poetry is due to appear in Rampike and an academic review has been published in the Canadian Journal of History.   

Brendan Sanderson is an artist w ho lives in Nova Scotia and who has contributed many covers and illustrations to The Antigonish Review.   top

Nan Minard Stender's work has been published previously in Event, Pottersfield Portfolio, Grain, The Antigonish Review and other journals.   

Virgil Suarez was born in Havana, Cuba. He is the author of four published novels: Latin Jazz, The Cutter, Havana Thursdays, and Going Under, and a collection of short stories titled Welcome to the Oasis.   top

Paul A. Toth lives in Michigan. His stories have appeared in The Blue Moon Review, Pif, Satire and others. He also freelances for several publications and works as a legal assistant.   

Carrie Villeneuve is working on her M.A. in English, Gender and Genre Studies, at Wilfred Laurier University in Waterloo, Ontario.   top

Leslie Williams has an MFA in Writing from Vermont College of Norwich University, where she has taught writing and Liberal Studies in the Adult Degree Program since 1991. Her poems, short stories and essays have appeared in a variety of magazines. She lives in Worcester, Vermont, and is a frequent visitor to Prince Edward Island, which she considers her second home.   

Hai Zi was a most precocious and promising young star among the Obscure (or Misty) poets who emerged after China's 1979 reforms. Since his death in 1989, Hai Zi's reputation has continually grown. His works include the long poem Earth, and Hai Zi·Luo Yihe Selected Poems.   

David Zieroth won the Dorothy Livesay Prize for How I Joined Humanity at Last (Harbour, 1998). His most recent publication is a chapbook, The Tangled Bed (Reference West, 2000).   top

 

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