Issue Four: November 2009
Arlene  Ang is the author of four poetry collections, the most recent being  a collaborative work with Valerie Fox, Bundles of Letters Including  A, V and Epsilon (Texture Press, 2008). She lives in Spinea, Italy  where she serves as staff editor for The Pedestal Magazine and  Press 1. More of her work may be viewed at www.leafscape.org.
 Chad  Benson is a Michigan native currently living in Brooklyn, NY, where  he is at work on a novel.  His work has appeared in The South  Carolina Review and Portland Review. 
 Benjamin  H. Cheever's most recent book, Strides, is a history of  running.  He lives in Westchester County,   part of the transient  culture that horrified and amused his father.   Sometimes the evening  seems to hang by a golden thread.  Sometimes not.        
 
 Anna  Clark's writing has appeared in The American Prospect Online,  AlterNet, Blood Lotus, Utne Reader, Common Dreams, Women's eNews,  Religion Dispatches, The Women's International Perspective, ColorLines,  Bitch Magazine, Writer's Journal, RH Reality Check, truthout, and  many other publications. She edits the literary and social justice  website, Isak. She lives and  writes from Detroit, MI. 
 Stephen  Dobyns has published twelve books of poems, twenty novels, a book  of essays on poetry and a book of short stories. Palgrave will publish a  new book of essays, Next Word, Better Word, in 2011.  Copper  Canyon will publish his thirteenth book of poems, Winter’s Journey,  in May 2010. 
 Nicolle  Elizabeth is a contributing writer for The Brooklyn Rail,  Fictionaut, Words Without Borders, and other publications she  cannot believe let her anywhere near a keyboard. Her fiction has  appeared or is forthcoming in Elimae, Caketrain, Wigleaf, Night  Train, Dogzplot, and other lovely publications she is grateful to  be a part of. She is also a bike mechanic. Her teenie personal blog,  which apparently has some kind of following in Japan is http://glassatlassassafras.blogspot.com.
 Judy  Huddleston received her BFA from California Institute of the Arts  and her MFA from Eastern Washington University. Her memoir This is  the End was published in 1991. She has recently completed her  second memoir and first collection of poetry. She currently teaches  Literature, Writing, Film and the Novel at Globe University in the Twin  Cities.
 
 John  Madera once suffered from convulsions and blood discharge from his  ears. He did not cry then but trembled and jerked around and blinked his  eyes. As a toddler, he had sprained his fingers after playing leapfrog  in the living room with his brothers. And he was once rushed to the  emergency room after swallowing a marble. He later marveled at his x-ray  where a shiny orb of light sat underneath his scaffold of ribs. Not  long after this, he fell on top of a two-liter glass bottle of soda he  had accidentally dropped on the sidewalk. The neighborhood drunk had  scooped him up in his arms, rushed him to his home, and kicked on the  front door. A doctor sewed up the hole in his chest. Despite all of  this, not to mention the removal of a swollen lymph node from his neck, a  fall in the shower where he’d hit his head on the bathtub, and the  painful removal of all of his impacted wisdom teeth, he has survived to  tell many a tale. You may find him at www.johnmadera.com.
 Jill  Meyers is the editor of American Short Fiction. Her book  reviews have appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle and Mid-American  Review as well as on Bookslut.
 Stacy  Muszynski writes. Her recent work appears at elimae, Opium,  Everyday Genius, The Rumpus, more. She web edits American Short  Fiction and co-hosts Five  Things Austin. 
 
 Brian  Oliu is originally from New Jersey and currently lives in Alabama.   His work has been featured in Ninth Letter, New Ohio Review,  Brevity, DIAGRAM, Best Creative Nonfiction Vol. 2, and others. His  website is http://www.brianoliu.com.  This is an automated message. 
 
 Andi  Olsen’s short film Where the Smiling Ends was exhibited  recently at the Revolving Museum in Lowell, MA, and the American  Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore, and also screened at the LA  International Shorts Festival and Valley Film Festival. Her ongoing  installation, Hideous Beauties: A Freak Show, consists of  video/DVD, assemblages, and collage-texts that explore the notion of  monstrosity.  The piece in this issue forms part of Lance and Andi  Olsen's fake disease series. 
 Lance  Olsen's latest novel, Head in Flames, was published in  November by Chiasmus. His short work has recently appeared in Artifice,  Hotel Amerika, Conjunctions, Black Warrior Review, and Denver  Quarterly.  He teaches innovative narrative theory and practice at  the University of Utah. His website is www.lanceolsen.com.
 Kate  Petersen’s work has previously appeared in The Iowa Review,  Brevity, Quarterly West, Phoebe, The Best of the Web 2009, and the Fourth  Genre: Writers of/on Creative Non-fiction. She lives in  Somerville, Massachusetts and works in Boston, where she writes for PostScript and  the Health Policy Hub. 
 The author of six  books of fiction and one biography, Melissa  Pritchard has received numerous awards, including the Flannery  O’Connor and Carl Sandburg Awards, the Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize,  several O. Henry Award and Pushcart Prizes, as well as Hawthornden  International, Howard Foundation, and NEA fellowships. Her most recent  fiction appears in Conjunctions, Agni, Image, Fanzine (forthcoming), and A Public Space (forthcoming). She has just  completed a collection of short stories, The Odditorium, and  teaches at Arizona State University. Her website is www.melissapritchard.com.
 Cooper  Renner's fiction has appeared recently in or is forthcoming from Keyhole,  New York Tyrant, Anemone Sidecar, Grey Sparrow Journal, Sleeping Fish,  and Unscroll. "Dr Polidori's Sketchbook" will appear in March  in the Mud Luscious chapbook series. His website is www.cooprenner.com.
 Anis  Shivani’s short fiction collection, Anatolia and Other Stories,  has just been released from Black Lawrence Press/Dzanc Books.  He is  finishing a novel and a book of criticism.
 
 Keith  Taylor's most recent book is If the World Becomes So Bright.
 
 Ornela  Vorpsi was born in Tirana, Albania and now lives in Paris. The  Country Where No One Ever Dies was her first novel and won several  prizes in Italy, including the Grinzane Cavour and Viareggio Prizes. It  has since been published in fourteen languages.
