Contributors’ Notes

Steve Bargdill used to drive semi-trucks across the country. Now, he teaches a variety of writing classes at the University of New Hampshire, Great Bay Community College, and Big Fish Learning Community. He’s written a couple novels, working on another. TINGE Magazine is his first professional publishing credit. You can keep up with him on his blog at www.stevebargdill.com.

Francis Bede is an Australian who lives in Tasmania. His burlesque novel Bad Clergy, a question in five fantasies, is published by Niche Press.

Zoe Darsee is a poet/teacher based in Berlin. Alongside Nat Marcus, she is co-editor of TABLOID Press, a publishing platform that aims to stimulate and integrate poetic practices within social communities. Recent work can be found online or in print in PRELUDE, GRUPPE, and Slanted House.

Alyse Knorr is an assistant professor of English at Regis University and co-editor of Switchback Books. She is the author of three books and three chapbooks of poetry as well as one non-fiction book. Her work has appeared in Denver Quarterly, The Cincinnati Review, The Greensboro Review, and ZYZZYVA. Visit her at www.alyseknorr.com.

Andrew Kozma’s fiction has been published in Escape Pod, Reckoning, Daily Science Fiction, and Interzone. His first book of poems, City of Regret (Zone 3 Press, 2007), won the Zone 3 First Book Award and his second book Orphanotrophia will be published by Cobalt Press in 2019.

Lasher Lane has worked many years for Prentice Hall’s art department in book composition. Her work is featured in Volume 1 Brooklyn’s Sunday Stories, Hippocampus, Foliate Oak, Zodiac Review, Obra/Artifact, and Hypertext.

Austen Camille Weymueller is an M.F.A. candidate in painting at the Tyler School of Art, Temple University and received her B.A. from Reed College. She has attended artist residencies at the Wormfarm Institute in Wisconsin and at Jentel in Wyoming. Her work has been exhibited in Portland, Milwaukee, Chiang Mai and Philadelphia, and she has received public art commissions in Oregon, Wisconsin and Texas.