Lily Brent
Lily Brent has a D.C. address and New Jersey roots. She has worked in prisons and public schools, East Harlem and the Eastern Province of Rwanda. A graduate of Oberlin College and Columbia University, her writing has previously appeared in 42Opus, Apeiron Review, Blue Fifth Review, Cleaver Magazine, and Fiction Now, and has been featured by FictionDaily.org.
Tom Ingram
Tom Ingram is an English literature and creative writing student at Columbus State University. He has published fiction, creative non-fiction, and poetry in Arden, and fiction in the online journals Red Fez and Sprinklers. He writes advertising copy for the Ledger-Enquirer and Her Magazine, and he edits PlayGrounds Magazine, Columbus, Georgia’s monthly arts and entertainment magazine.
Naomi Ruth Lowinsky
Naomi Ruth Lowinsky’s fourth poetry collection, “The Faust Woman Poems,” trace one woman’s Faustian adventures during the 1960s and ‘70s, through Women’s Liberation and the return of the Goddess. Her memoir, “The Sister from Below: When the Muse Gets Her Way” tells stories about her pushy muse.
Audrey El-Osta
Audrey El-Osta is a Melbourne based writer, studying Linguistics and Psychology at Monash University. A collector of cookbooks, listener of audiobooks and reader of poetry, she lives with four cats and three humans that don’t quite measure up. Her work explores themes of femininity, sexuality and womanhood, mental illness, comedy and linguistic identity, and has been published in Danse Macabre and Poetry D’Amour by WA Poets.
Paul Watsky
Paul Watsky, a Jungian analyst, is Poetry Editor of Jung Journal: Culture and Psyche. He is author of two collections, both from Fisher King Press, “Telling The Difference” (2010) and the newly-released “Walk-Up Music,” a Kirkus recommended selection. His work has appeared in Rattle, Interim, The Carolina Quarterly, Smartish Pace, and elsewhere.
Chris Campanioni
Chris Campanioni’s recent work has appeared in The Brooklyn Rail, Prelude Magazine, Quiddity, Rosebud Magazine, and Fjords Review. Find him in space at www.chriscampanioni.com or in person somewhere between Brooklyn Bridge Park and Barclays Center.
Yaron Kaver
Yaron Kaver has written for Israeli television and translated screenplays for hundreds of Israeli films and shows, including the original series adapted into Homeland. His fiction has appeared in Fractal Magazine, The Bookends Review and Cold Mountain Review. His short story “And the Oscar Goes to Jail” won first prize in the 2014 Mark Twain House Humor Writing Contest. He is currently pursuing his MFA in Creative Writing at Sarah Lawrence College.