March has arrived. And with it, a new round of contributors…
Amar Benchikha
Amar lives and writes in northern Italy . He has published fiction in American Whitewater Magazine.
Ian Paone
Ian Paone lives a Whistler and loves skiing maybe a little too much. When he’s not skiing waist deep powder hes driving the drunks around at night in his cab or joins them on their drunken adventures. When he gets the chance, he reads in between the blackouts and white rooms. Crack The Spine is his first publisher.
Peter Emmett Naughton
Peter fell into fiction by writing stories to amuse his grammar-school classmates, which helped him overcome his shyness, but led to very few completed homework assignments. He has an abiding love of cheese in all its gloriously stinky forms, horror movies with a sense of humor and trashy punk and garage-rock. He was raised and currently resides in Chicago with his wife and cats. His writing has appeared in The Delinquent, Candlelight, Black Words On White Paper, Spook City and Apiary.
Lily Murphy
Lily Murphy is 25 years old and comes from Cork city, Ireland . She is a B.A graduate of University College Cork and she loves nothing more than sipping Jack Daniels at the races. Sometimes she may even win a few bucks!
Suzanne Allen
Suzanne Allen’s poems appear in Not a Muse, (Haven Books, 2009) Strangers in Paris (Tightrope Books, 2011) and Villanelles (Random House, 2012) and in literary journals such as Tears in the Fence, Nerve Cowboy, Upstairs at Duroc, Spot Lit Mag, Pearl, California Quarterly, and Cider Press Review—who nominated her for a Pushcart Prize. She is a co-editor of the Paris based issue.ZERO, and her chapbook, Verisimilitude, is available at Corrupt Press.
Kyle Sundby
Kyle Sundby is going to keep this short because, damnit, we’re running out of time.
Peter Lingard
Peter Lingard sold ice-cream, worked as a bank clerk, a bookkeeper, and a barman. He delivered milk, served in the Royal Marines and ‘bounced’ leery customers in a London clip-joint. He went to Australia because the sun frequently shines there and he didn’t have to learn a new language.