32 Poems Fall Issue

We’re pleased to announce the following writers will have poems in the fall issue of 32 Poems Magazine.

We’ve included links to poems, Twitter feeds, poet blogs, and more below if we were able to find such links relating to our contributors. That way, you can get to know a little more about them.

Chris Anderson is a professor of English at Oregon State University and a Catholic deacon. He has written a number of books, including a book of poems, and his poems are published widely. A new poetry collection, Consolations, will be published next year by Airlie Press.

Christopher Bakken´s recent poems appear in Ploughshares, Hudson Review, Parnassus: Poetry in Review, and Subtropics. His two books are Goat Funeral (2006) and After Greece (2001).

Amy Fleury is the author of Beautiful Trouble (SIUP, 2004) and the 2009-10 Amy Clampitt Resident Poetry Fellow. She teaches in the M.F.A. program at McNeese State University in Lake Charles, Louisiana.

Michael Flatt lives in Denver where he teaches at Platt College. His poems have appeared most recently in Black Words on White Paper, Arsenic Lobster, and SpringGun Press. He’s on Twitter!

Sonja James is the author of two collections of poetry: Baiting the Hook (The Bunny & the Crocodile Press, 1999) and Children of the Moon (Argonne House Press, 2004). She resides in Martinsburg, West Virginia.

Luke Johnson (his blog) earned his MFA at Hollins University. Recent poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Beloit Poetry Journal, Greensboro Review, Passages North, Third Coast, and Best New Poets 2008.

Rose Kelleher grew up in Massachusetts and lives in Maryland. Her first book, Bundle o’ Tinder, won the 2007 Anthony Hecht Poetry Prize and was published in 2008 by Waywiser Press.

Stacy Kidd’s poems have appeared in Boston Review, The Iowa Review, and WITNESS, among others. Her chapbooks About Birds and A man in a boat in the summer are forthcoming this year. She is founder and editor of intersectionsjournal.org.

Chris Locke has received 2006 and 2007 Dorothy Sargent Memorial Poetry Prize. His first poetry colletion, End of American Magic, is forthcoming from Salmon Poetry (Ireland) in September of 2010.

William Logan

Jennifer Militello

Tyler Mills received her MFA from the University of Maryland. Her poems recently appeared in AGNI, Cimarron Review, Crab Orchard Review, and New Letters. She is a doctoral candidate at University of Illinois-Chicago.

Ander Monson lives in Arizona where he edits the magazine DIAGRAM (thediagram.com) and the New Michigan Press.

Darren Morris was born in 1969 in Kirkwood, Missouri. Another poem can be found in Blackbird.

Dan O’Brien’s play The Cherry Sisters Revisited premiered at the 2010 Humana Festival of New American Plays. His poems have appeared in Margie, Greensboro Review, and Alaska Quarterly Review. He was a Hodder Fellow playwright-in-residence at Princeton.

Saara Raappana has poems published or forthcoming in Cave Wall, Inkwell, Isotope, South Carolina Poetry Review, Spoon River Poetry Review, and Harvard Review Online, among others.

Jacques J. Rancourt was raised in rural Maine. His work has appeared or is forthcoming from numerous journals, including Columbia, Cimarron Review, and Linebreak, and has been anthologized in Dzanc’s Best of the Web 2008. He’s poetry editor of Devil’s Lake.

David Roderick was awarded the Amy Lowell Traveling Scholarship, and his first book, Blue Colonial, was the winner of the 2006 APR/Honickman Prize. He currently teaches in Greensboro, North Carolina.

Diana Smith graduated from the University of Florida MFA program in May 2009. She teaches community college in Del Rio, TX. Her poems have appeared in elimae and SALiT.

Erin Elizabeth Smith wrote The Fear of Being Found (Three Candles Press 2008) and the chapbook The Chainsaw Bears (Dancing Girl Press 2010). Her poems have appeared poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in New Delta Review, Third Coast, Crab Orchard, and Willow Springs among others.

Melissa Stein’s poetry collection Rough Honey won the 2010 APR/Honickman First Book Prize. Her work has appeared in Southern Review, Best New Poets 2009, New England Review, and other journals.

Eric Torgersen is completing a book-length collection of ghazals to be called In Which We See Ourselves: American Ghazals. His most recent book is the novella The Man Who Loved Rilke.

Sidney Wade has published five collections of poems, the most recent of which is Stroke (Persea Books, 2008). She teaches poetry and translation workshops at the University of Florida.

Lesley Wheeler’s new book, Heterotopia, is winner of the Barrow Street Press Poetry Prize. Her other books include Heathen, Voicing American Poetry, and the anthology Letters to the World. She is professor of English at Washington and Lee University.

Cori A. Winrock’s poems have appeared in (or are waiting in the wings of) Denver Quarterly, Indiana Review, Shenandoah, Pool.