Santa Fe Literary Review 2015

Page 199

Sara Lippmann is the recipient of a 2012 Fellowship in Fiction from the New York Foundation for the Arts. Her debut story collection, Doll Palace, was published by Dock Street Press (2014). Her work has appeared in Tupelo Quarterly, Joyland, Mr. Beller’s Neighborhood, PANK, The Potomac Review, Fourth Genre, Slice Magazine, and many other print and online publications. Raised outside of Philadelphia, she lives with her husband and children in Brooklyn. George Longenecker teaches writing and history at Vermont Technical College. His recent poetry has been published in, Atlanta Review, Sixfold, The Kerf, and Memoir. He’d rather be hiking in Utah or Vermont than waiting in airports. Ray Anthony Lopez is a native New Mexican. His writing career began as a reporter for the Las Cruces Sun-News and continued with The Taos News, writing about Hispano-Anglo cultural issues. Ray lives in Santa Fe with his three cats, Chico, Omar, Tucker, and his wife, Genevieve. Aside from writing, he is an avid art and music enthusiast and retired legislative analyst. Robin MacArthur is a mother, writer and musician who lives on the hillside where she was born in southern Vermont. She is the author of Contemporary Vermont Fiction: An Anthology and one half of the indie-folk duo Red Heart the Ticker. Her work as appeared in Orion Magazine, Alaska Quarterly, Shenandoah, and on NPR. Michael Gillan Maxwell is a writer and visual artist in the Finger Lakes region of New York state. Maxwell writes short fiction, poetry, songs, essays, lists, recipes and irate letters to his legislators. His work has been featured in a number of journals and anthologies. He served as associate flash fiction editor for JMWW quarterly journal from 2012-2014 and he is editor of MadHat’s Drive-By Book Reviews. A teller of tales and singer of songs, he’s prone to random outbursts and may spontaneously combust or break into song at any moment. Maxwell can be found ranting and raving on his website: Your Own Backyard http://michaelgillanmaxwell.com Kate McCahill

is a graduate of Wellesley College and the Vermont College of Fine Arts. Her essays and poems have appeared in Best Women’s Travel Writing, The Lowestoft Chronicle, The Evening Street Review, and The Santa Fe Literary Review. “Mora” is excerpted from her first book, Time Like Water: A Year Alone on the Patagonian Road.

Mary Morris received the Rita Dove Award and the New Mexico Discovery Award. Her writing appears in Prairie Schooner, The Columbia Review, and Quarterly West. Morris has been invited to read her poems at the Library of Congress and NPR. Water400@aol.com.

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