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Fall 2006 [Issue No. 10]
Contributors
Robert
M. Detman
received an MFA in Creative Writing from Goddard College in 2006. Prior to
this he was educated in architecture at The University of Michigan.
Originally from Flint, Michigan, Robert currently resides in San Francisco,
where he enjoys writing novels and playing guitar. His work has appeared in
The San Francisco Chronicle, Kitchen
Sink, Pitkin in Progress and NewCity. He can be reached
here.
Brady
Huggett
lives in Atlanta and you can reach him
here
and you can see more of his writing
here
or at verbsap.com.

Michael Jauchen
hails from Dallas, Texas
and now lives in Lafayette, Louisiana. His work has appeared in The
Kankakee Review, Megaera, and H_NGM_N. He can be reached
here.
Sangam
MacDuff was born in Pune, India, and brought up in the sannyasin
communities of notorious Indian guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh. After Bhagwan’s
arrest in 1985, Sangam moved to the Findhorn Foundation, a spiritual
community in northeast Scotland. He studied English at Trinity Hall,
Cambridge University, graduating in 2000. Since then he has been travelling,
writing and teaching. He has just completed the MSc in Creative Writing at
Edinburgh University.
Mark
MacNamara recently returned to
San Francisco after living in Morocco, where he wrote this story. His last
short story appeared in
Southern Gothic Online.
He can be reached
here.
Maisie
McAdoo
is a writer/researcher for
the New York City teachers union. Before joining the union staff she worked
as a journalist for Reuters, Knight-Ridder and several newspapers and wrote
extensively on education, law and business. She began writing fiction
several years ago in a Brooklyn writers group. She still lives in Brooklyn
with her husband, two children and an old dog. You can reach
Maisie here.
Arthur
Saltzman, Professor of English at Missouri Southern State
University, is the author of several books, including the literary
nonfiction collections Objects and Empathy, which won the First
Series Creative Nonfiction Award from Mid-List Press, and Nearer,
which came out this past spring from Parlor Press. His newest collection, The Obligations of the Harp, is due out
in 2007. "Wunderkindergarten" will be reprinted in his new
collection, Solve for X, which was recently accepted for publication
by the University of South Carolina Press.
You can
reach him here.

Originally from Warsaw, Poland,
Magdalena Sokolowski recently
relocated to Portland, Maine from Missoula, Montana where she tutored
writing at the University of Montana. Her work may also be found in
Pebble Lake Review.
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