
Poet's
Lane
Poets In the Know
"Fame is a bee
It has a song
It has a sting
Ah, too, it has a wing"
Emily Dickinson
Send your bios, pictures and full contact information to
PoetsLane@comcast.net
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Dylan Barmmer is
a writer, poet and performer living in the stunning San Diego
surf enclave of Cardiff-by-the-Sea, CA. Dylan is also the founder and raconteur
of Word Is Born, a creative copywriting consortium that crafts powerful
communications in a variety of mediums. You can learn more about Word Is Born
and its newest brainchild, Random Acts of Poetry, here.

Maril Crabtree grew up in
Memphis and New Orleans and came to Kansas University as a freshman with a
burning desire to be a world-renowned journalist. Three degrees, four careers
and several decades later, she lives in Kansas City and has a burning desire to
write poems that, as Stanley Kunitz said, “get through to the other side, where
we can hear the deep rhythms that connect us with the stars and the tides.” She
is editor of four anthologies of poetry and personal essays published by Adams
Media. Her chapbook, Dancing with Elvis, was
published in 2005 and a second chapbook, Moving On (Pudding House Press)
in 2010. A Pushcart Prize nominee, her poetry has appeared in numerous literary
journals. See more of her work at
www.marilcrabtree.com

Maryfrances Wagner
has five books of poetry including Salvatore’s Daughter (BkMk), nominated
for a Pushcart Prize, Red Silk, winner of the Thorpe Menn Book Award for
2000, and Light Subtracts Itself (MidAm), selected as one of the top ten
poetry books of 08 by the Kansas City Star. Her poems are widely
published in literary magazines including Laurel Review, New Letters,
Birmingham Poetry Review, Nebraska Review, Karamu, et. al. and various
anthologies and textbooks including Unsettling America (Penguin),
Bearing Witness and The Dream Book, winner of the American Book
Award, and Literature Across Cultures (Pearson/Longman). She has taught
writing for over twenty years and has served as co-editor of the New Letters
Review of Books, English Coordinator for UMKC, and co-president of The Writers
Place. She and her husband sponsor the Crystal Field Scholarship for a creative
writing student at UMKC.
Maryfrances has two Australian cattle dogs named Emily Dickinson Dog and Pablo
Neruda Dog Boy. They make her laugh every day even though they are far too
smart for dogs and like to herd everything moving.

Tina Hacker
is ecstatic about the release of her literary poetry chapbook Cutting It,
published by The Lives You Touch Publications in PA. A two-time Pushcart Prize
nominee, she was a finalist in New Letters and George F. Wedge
competitions. Her work has appeared in numerous journals including Bellowing
Ark, Blue Unicorn, Kansas City Voices, Coal City Review, Mid-America Poetry
Review, Little Balkans Review, The Kansas City Star and Touch: The
Journal of Healing where she was featured as Editor’s Choice. Her work also
appears in anthologies: Missouri Poets, Show + Tell, Imagination & Place:
Ownership and In the Black/In the Red: Poems of Profit and Loss. Tina
served on the Board of Directors and is the immediate past co-president of The
Writers Place in Kansas City, Missouri.

William Trowbridge
holds a B.A. in
Philosophy and an M. A. in English from the University of Missouri-Columbia and
a Ph.D. in English from Vanderbilt University. His poetry publications include
five full collections: Ship of Fool (Red Hen Press, forthcoming), The
Complete Book of Kong (Southeast Missouri State University Press, 2003),
Flickers, O Paradise, and Enter Dark Stranger (University of Arkansas
Press, 2000, 1995, 1989), and three chapbooks, The Packing House
Cantata (Camber Press, 2006), The Four Seasons (Red Dragonfly
Press, 2001) and The Book of Kong (Iowa State University Press, l986).
His poems have appeared more than 30 anthologies and textbooks, as well as in
such periodicals as Poetry, The Gettysburg Review, Crazyhorse, The Georgia
Review, Boulevard, The Southern Review, Columbia, Colorado Review, The Iowa
Review, Prairie Schooner, Epoch, and New Letters. He has given
readings and workshops at schools, colleges, bookstores, and literary
conferences throughout the United States. His awards include an Academy of
American Poets Prize, a Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference scholarship, a Camber
Press Poetry Chapbook Award, and fellowships from The MacDowell Colony, Ragdale,
Yaddo, and The Anderson Center. He is Distinguished University Professor
Emeritus at Northwest Missouri State University, where he was an editor of
The Laurel Review/GreenTower Press from 1986 to 2004. Now living in Lee’s
Summit, MO, he teaches in the University of Nebraska low-residency MFA in
writing program. William's new poetry collection,
SHIP OF FOOL, will be coming out from Red Hen Press in February and you can get
more information on his web site
http://williamtrowbridge.net .

Mel C. Thompson
is a product of the San Francisco open mic scene and was first published in
their underground zine ‚Bullhorn‚ in 1990. At that time he started Mel Thompson
Publishing under the labels of Cyborg Productions, Blue Beetle Press and
Citi-Voice Magazine, where he published such literary figures as Michael
McClure, Alan Kaufman, Daniel Higgs and Bruce Isaacson.
In the 90s his poetry was also
published in such magazines as The Chiron Review, The Bay Area Guardian,
Wordwrights and the The Haight Ashbury Literary Review. He featured extensively
in such venues as the Paradise Lounge, Café Babar, The Exit Café and the
Chameleon Club.
In 2008-2009 he was published
frequently online at such sites as "nthposition.com," "silencedpress.com" and
"languageandculture.net," and also appeared in print in The World Poets Journal
(China), Jackknife Express (Canada) and Over The Transom (San Francisco).
Currently he is anthologized in
the Poetry Salzburg Review, (University of Austria at Salzburg), Beatitude
Golden Anniversary Issue (1959-2009), The Las Positas College Anthology and
Poets From Hell (New American Underground Poetry). (His works are also archived
at numerous universities across the united states.)
In the last few years he was also
featured at The Berkeley Poetry Festival, The San Francisco Beat Museum, The
Frank Bette Center For The Arts, the San Francisco Park Branch Library and at
the Felix Kulpa Gallery in Santa Cruz. Recently his poem, "On The Search For
God In Detroit" was translated into Chinese and published world-wide.
He has been written about or
interviewed by media outlets ranging from USA Today, The Los Angeles Times and
Canadian Public Broadcasting.
Mel C. Thompson
Care of Union Post SF
237 Kearny Street, #102
San Francisco, CA 94108-4502, USA
zinelife@yahoo.com
www.melcthompson.com
Denise Low -Kansas Poet Laureate Emerita

A 1987
graduate of UCLA and a lifetime member of the Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society,
Blake More is an artist with many creative voices and
expressions, poetry being her first obsession, though her work spans the
spectrum: from book, magazine, poetry and playwriting to performance art, dance
and yogic trapeze; from teaching poetry, video and drama to theatrical costume
design, functional mixed media art/life pieces, assemblage sculpture and wildly
painted poetry art cars (including Eartha Karr, a 1978 Mercedes that runs on Bio
Diesel (www.snakelyone.com/EARTHA/done.htm).
Currently, Blake lives in the tree, ocean, and character-lined pastures of the
not-so lost Mendocino coast. Her newest book godmeat (Beatitude
Press, January 2008), is a collection of poetry, prose and color artwork and
includes a poem movie compilation DVD. To learn more about godmeat,
go to
www.godmeat.com. To explore Blake's many other
creative endeavors, please go to her website,
www.snakelyone.com.

Born in
Long Beach, California, Susan Browne has lived most of her life in the
Bay Area. Her poetry has appeared in Ploughshares, Subtropics, River City,
The Mississippi Review, Gargoyle, Margie, American Life in Poetry, and
other literary journals and anthologies, such as 180 More, Extraordinary
Poems for Everyday. Her awards include prizes from the Chester H. Jones
Foundation, the National Writer's Union, the Los Angeles Poetry Festival, and
the River Styx International Poetry Contest. Her work was nominated for
a Pushcart Award. Selected as the winner of The Four Way Books Prize by Edward
Hirsch, her first book, Buddha’s Dogs, was published in 2004. She also
has a word/music CD with poet Kim Addonizio, Swearing, Smoking, Drinking, &
Kissing, available from www.cdbaby.com.
Her poems have recently appeared on Garrison Keillor's Writer's Almanac.
Her second book of poetry, Zephyr, won the Editor's Prize at Steel Toe
Books (www.steeltoebooks.com),
published in 2010.
Susan
teaches at Diablo Valley College in Pleasant Hill, California. She
offers online workshops in poetry. Currently, she is working on a memoir.
Webpage:
http://www.redroom.com/author/susan-browne
email:
browne1dvc@aol.com

Charles Ekabhumi Ellik embodies a rare combination
of successful published poet, award-winning performer, respected organizer, and
popular emcee. He is founder and occasional emcee of the Berkeley Poetry Slam,
which has earned "Best of The East Bay" and many other awards since its
inception in 1999. In addition to The Berkeley Slam, he has hosted myriad other
slams and open mics throughout California, attesting to his formidable emcee
skills. In 2007 he won the national “Head 2 Head” championship.
http://bordersmedia.com/odp
In 1992, he co-founded Poetry On Wednesdays; P.O.W. was
one of the largest poetry events in Southern California for nearly 5 years, with
over 400 poets featured. While living in Long Beach, he helped created and edit
Next… Magazine, a journal and calendar with a circulation of 15,000 that
chronicled the incredible growth of Southern California’s spoken word community
during the mid 90’s. After moving to the San Francisco Bay Area in '97, he took
over the SF slam and touched off an explosion in the Northern California
performance poetry scene, resulting in a First Place tie at the National Slam in
'99 between SF and San Jose, with Oakland in third. There are now more than a
dozen regular slams in Northern CA.
He has featured across N. America and Britain and has been featured in many
interviews, anthologies and journals including High Desert Voices, Berkeley
Fiction Review, Pearl, Poetry Super Highway, and Clean Sheets. His greatest
sense of accomplishment comes from coaching poets and slam teams to their
numerous regional and national titles. His most profound sense of peace comes
from studying, teaching, and regular practice of
Classical Hatha Yoga. When not writing, painting, or practicing Yoga, he can be
found in his garden learning directly from nature.
Ekabhumi has shared the stage with nearly every notable Slam champion and quite
a few underground legends, including: Patricia Smith, Marc Bamuthi Joseph, Mike
McGee, Buddy Wakefield, Beth Lisick, Sonya Renee, Anis Mojgani, Michelle Tea,
Daphne Gottleib, Bucky Sinister, Staceyann Chin, The Suicide Kings, and Marc
Smith, to name only a few. He has also shared the stage with numerous renowned
“page” poets, including: Robert Hass, Maya Angelou, Quincy Troupe, Gerald
Locklin, and Charles Webb.
www.berkeleypoetryslam.com

Jose Faus is an artist and writer living in Kansas City, MO. He is
cofounder of the Latino Writers Collective. His work appears in the
anthologies Cuentos del Centro: Stories from the Latino Heartland, Primera
Pagina: Poetry from the Latino Heartland. He maintains carido studio, an
art studio in downtown Kansas City, KS.
carridos@gmail.com

Kansas City poet,
Eve Brackenbury
lives in nearby
rural Sibley, Missouri. Her poetry often reflects both rural and urban
landscapes. She frequently reads her poetry at Prospero's Books Pit poetry
readings and at the Writer's Place. She works as a Creative Writing and English
tutor at a local community college and hosts Creative Writing Workshops. She was
a featured poet at the 2010 Poetry Filibuster. Hosted by Write The Future and
Prospero's Books - A world record breaking event featuring 120 hours of non-stop
poetry. Eve is also known as Calliope at
AuthorNation.com and is often considered to be the resident "muse."
Her first book of poetry was
written with co-author Paul McGlamery. Their book, A Companion of Lesser
Brilliance is not just a collection of poems, but rather, the story of two
lovers who are seduced by the moon.
Eve is quickly transitioning from
muse and open-mic poet to published author. Look for her upcoming book of poetry
called "You" in 2011, and another collaboration of poetry called "Black Coffee
and Pie." Eve is also completing a work of fiction based on the life of a Korean
War veteran.

Jannie M. Dresser
is a Bay Area poet with Central Valley roots. She is the San Francisco Poetry
Examiner at examiner.com and the co-founder,
publisher and editor of the Bay Area Poets Seasonal Review. She has spent
her life in the book and periodicals business as a writer, editor, and
publications manager. A graduate of Mills College, she also teaches poetry
writing in a variety of settings in Northern California and in Mexico. She is
married to veteran theater actor, Julian Lopez-Morillas. They live in Crockett,
CA at the top of the SF Bay, with three cats and wild turkeys.

Alarie
Tennille was born and raised in Portsmouth, Virginia with a genius
older brother destined for N.A.S.A, a ghost, and a yard full of cats. A Phi
Beta Kappa, she graduated from the University of Virginia in the first class
that admitted women (B.A. with distinction in English). She met her husband,
graphic artist Chris Purcell, in college. They live in Kansas City, Missouri,
where Alarie serves on the Board of Directors of The Writers Place. Her poems
have appeared in numerous journals, including Poetry
East, Margie, ByLine Magazine, English
Journal, I-70 Review, Coal
City Review, Kansas City Voices, TheMid-America
Poetry Review, Little Balkans Review, Touch: The Journal of Healing, and The
Kansas City Star.
Alarie's new chapbook,
Spiraling into Control, is now available on Amazon.com or through her
publisher: http://www.thelivesyoutouch.com/touchjournal/Publications/Tennille.html

Frank W. Finney, Jr BA, Certifificate of Creative Writing from University of
Massachusetts, Boston MA; MA in English, MPhil (with Distinction) Simmons
College, USA. His poems have appeared in numerous publications including
The Nation
(Thailand);
Green
Mountains Review (USA);
Offerta
Speciale (Italy);
Verandah
(Australia) and many others. Collections include:
Fragments
from the Smoked-Glass Elephant Bank (chapbook) and
The
Dissolution of the Sparkling Bridge. Work forthcoming in
Iodine Poetry
Review,
The Lilliput
Review (USA) and elsewhere.
More biographical information is available from
International
Who's Who in Poetry and Poets' Encylopaedia;
Marquis Who's
Who in the World.
ajarn.frank@asia.com
Web site:
frankwilliamfinneypoet.webs.com
Frank William Finney, Jr
Thammsat University
Department of English Language & Literature
Rangsit Campus
Klong Luang, Prathum Thani
Thailand
02-696-5632
picture by John
Campbell
Dorianne Laux’s
fourth book of poems, Facts about the Moon, is the recipient of the
Oregon Book Award and was short-listed for the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize.
Laux is also author of Awake, What We Carry, finalist for the National Book
Critic’s Circle Award, and Smoke, as well as two fine small press editions,
Superman: The Chapbook and Dark Charms, both from Red Dragonfly Press. Co-author
of The Poet's
Companion: A Guide to the Pleasures of Writing Poetry,
she’s the recipient of two Best American Poetry Prizes, a Pushcart Prize, two
fellowships from The National Endowment for the Arts and a Guggenheim
Fellowship. Widely anthologized, her work has appeared in the Best of APR, The
Norton Anthology of Contemporary Poetry and The Best of the Net. In 2001, she
was invited by late poet laureate Stanley Kunitz to read at the Library of
Congress. She has been teaching poetry in private and public venues since 1990
and since 2004 at Pacific University’s Low-Residency MFA Program. In the
summers she teaches at the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, California and Truro
Center for the Arts at Castle Hill. Her poems have been translated into French,
Spanish, Italian, Korean, Romanian, Dutch, Afrikkans and Brazilian Portuguese
and her selected works, In a Room with a Rag in my Hand, have been translated
into Arabic by Camel/Kalima Press. Recent poems appear in The American Poetry
Review, Cimarron Review, Cerise Press, Margie, The Seattle Review, Tin House and
The Valparaiso Review. Her fifth collection of poetry, The Book of Men, will be
published by W.W.
Norton in February, 2011. She and her husband, poet
Joseph Millar, moved to Raleigh in 2008 where she teaches poetry in the MFA
program at North Carolina State University.

picture by John Campbell
JOSEPH MILLAR’s
first collection, Overtime (2001) was finalist for the Oregon Book Award. A
second collection, Fortune, appeared in 2007.
Millar grew up in Pennsylvania, attended Johns Hopkins
University and spent 25 years in the San Francisco Bay area working at a variety
of jobs, from telephone repairman to commercial fisherman. It would be two
decades before he returned to poetry. His poems—stark, clean, unsparing—record
the narrative of a life fully lived among fathers, sons, brothers, daughters,
weddings and divorces, men and women. His work has won fellowships from the
National Endowment for the Arts and a 2008 Pushcart Prize and has appeared in
such magazines as DoubleTake, TriQuarterly, The Southern Review, APR, and
Ploughshares.
In 1997 he gave up his job as telephone installation
foreman to try his hand at teaching. A new chapbook, Bestiary, is now available
from Red Dragonfly Press, and a third collection, Blue Rust, will be published
by Carnegie-Mellon in fall of 2011. Millar is now core faculty at Pacific
University’s Low Residency MFA and lives in Raleigh, NC, with his wife, the poet
Dorianne Laux.
http://josephmillar.org

Patrick Connors has a poem in 'The
Toronto
Quarterly 4.’ He has had several bylines in community newspapers, and most
recently in Open Book Toronto
magazine. He recently read his poem, ‘Recovery’, on the CJSF radio program
‘Sound Therapy’. He is a graduate of the George Brown Creative Writing Program,
and was a headline reader in Fall 2008 at the 'Cryptic Chatter' poetry series.
He also self-published a book of poems called Scarborough
Songs in late 2008.
Posted find a link to the recording of 'Recovery' from CJSF
radio made on January 4 of this year, so you can also hear as well as read him:
http://soundtherapyradio.com/2010/01/04/recovery-by-patrick-john-timothy-connors/
Patrick Connors
[pconnors69@yahoo.ca]

Penelope La Montagne is poet
laureate emerita of Healdsburg, CA. (2004-2006) Penelope lives on the banks of
the Russian River and has learned most of what she knows from watching the
river, not pushing, not holding back. For six years, she was the producer of
Morning Haiku for KRCB Radio in Sonoma
County. She is a California Poet in the Schools, a
local realtor, and author of River Shoes by Running Wolf Press and co-author of
Fruit of Life, Poems of Passion and Politics, published by dpress. Her full
length manuscript, When Nature Chooses You Back will be published later this
year.
Penelope La Montagne
P.O. Box 1626
Healdsburg, CA 95448
onepenelope@comcast.net
707 433-2121 home
707 583-4949 cell
Linda
Watanabe McFerrin
-
Poet, travel writer, and novelist Linda Watanabe McFerrin (www.lwmcferrin.com
) is a contributor to numerous newspapers, magazines and
anthologies. She is the author of two poetry collections, past
editor of a popular Northern California guidebook and a winner of
the Katherine Anne Porter Prize for Fiction. Her novel, Namako: Sea
Cucumber, was named Best Book for the Teen-Age by the New York
Public Library. In addition to authoring an award-winning short
story collection, The Hand of Buddha, she has co-edited several
anthologies, including the Hot Flashes: sexy little stories & poems
series.
Linda has judged the San Francisco Literary Awards and the Kiriyama
Prize, served as a visiting mentor for the Loft Mentor Series and
been guest faculty at the Oklahoma Arts Institute. A past NEA
Panelist and juror for the Marin Literary Arts Council, she has led
workshops in Greece, France, Italy, Ireland and the United States
and has mentored a long list of accomplished writers toward
publication.
Poet, travel writer, and novelist Linda Watanabe McFerrin
(www.lwmcferrin.com) is a contributor to numerous newspapers,
magazines and anthologies. She is the author of two poetry
collections, past editor of a popular Northern California guidebook
and a winner of the Katherine Anne Porter Prize for Fiction. Her
novel, Namako: Sea Cucumber, was named Best Book for the Teen-Age by
the New York Public Library. In addition to authoring an
award-winning short story collection, The Hand of Buddha,...
-
-
http://lwmcferrin.com
http://leftcoastwriters.com
http://hotflashessexystories.com
http://deadlove.com

Terry McCarty
was born on July 31, 1959 in Electra, Texas. He moved to Southern California in
1988. From 1988 to 1997, he worked as a background actor and occasional
stand-in for actors including Joe
Pesci (THE PUBLIC EYE, LETHAL WEAPON 3,
and JIMMY HOLLYWOOD) and Wallace
Shawn (HOUSE ARREST).
Terry began writing poetry in the
summer of 1997. From 1998
to 1999, he was a member of the
Midnight Special Bookstore poetry workshop in
Santa Monica. He has been a
featured poet in several Southern California venues.
Terry has also featured at
readings in Las Vegas, NV, San Francisco, CA, Santa Cruz, CA, Berkeley, CA and
Seattle, WA.
Terry has also appeared in Lynda
and Lisa LaRose’s THE POETRY SPIRAL
at Luna Sol Café (Los Angeles),
Roni Walter’s BAKSTREEET COMETRI
at the Comedy Store (West
Hollywood) and
the Austin International Poetry
Festival (Austin, TX).
Terry McCarty is the author of
several chapbooks containing poems
which blend humor with occasional
social and/or political
commentary: HOLLYWOOD POETRY, USE YOUR DELUSION, WICHITA FALLS, LOVE POEMS, THE
GREEN ALBUM,
ADJUSTMENT DISORDER and two
volumes of GREATEST HITS.
Recent chapbooks include NEVER
MET BUKOWSKI and IMPERFECTIONIST.
Terry has several poems included
in THE LONG WAY HOME: THE BEST OF THE LITTLE RED
BOOK SERIES 1998-2008 edited by
R.D. Armstrong--available through Lummox Press
(http://www.lummoxpress.com).
In addition, Terry’s poem
“Icarus’ Itinerary can be found in Tebot Bach’s 2003 anthology of California poetry SO LUMINOUS
THE WILDFLOWERS (for sale through
www.Amazon.com ).

Adam David Miller is an
African-American poet, writer, publisher, and radio
programmer and producer.
Born in Dorchester County,
South Carolina on October 8, 1922, Miller published
one of the first collections of modern
African-American poetry, as well as four books of
poetry and a memoir, Ticket to Exile about
his life growing up in the Jim Crow South.
Miller served in the United States Navy from 1942
-1946. He attended university on the G.I. Bill,
earning a Masters Degree in English (1953) from the
University of California at Berkeley where he also
completed post-degree work in drama and helped found
the university’s Graduate Student Journal, a
magazine of opinion and art.
Throughout his career, Miller has promoted and
published other writers. In Dices, Or Black
Bones, (1970), he showcased the early poems of
Al Young, California’s poet laureate (2005-2008),
Ishmael Reed, Clarence Major, Lucille Clifton,
Etheridge Knight and Victor Hernandez Cruz.
Miller’s own first book of
poetry was Neighborhood and Other Poems, Forever
Afternoon (1994), which won the Naomi Long
Madgett Poetry Award and was published by Michigan
State University Press; next came Apocalypse Is
My Garden (1997) and Land Between (2000).
Ticket to Exile, A
Memoir, published by Heyday Books, was a
finalist in the creative nonfiction category in the
2008 awards given out by the Northern California
Book Reviewers Association and was one of three
finalists in the William Saroyan International Prize
for Writing in 2008.
Miller taught English for
21 years at Laney Community College in Oakland,
California where he helped create Good News,
a campus and community journal of art and culture.
He continued to teach at the UC Berkeley until 1991
and has twice been an Invited Fellow with the Bay
Area Writing Project (1978 and 1994).
For six years, Miller
served on the Berkeley Arts Commission and helped
inaugurate the Addison Street “Poetry Walk” in
Berkeley's renovated downtown arts district.
In the 1960s, Miller helped launch Aldridge Players
West, a Black drama group in San Francisco. He also
helped found Mina Press which published the unique
cultural history Japanese American Women: Three
Generations by Mei T. Nakano in 1990, as well
as other works.
He has worked with San
Francisco Bay Area public television and radio for
over forty years, creating programs on Norwegian
culture, women's labor history and the arts,
including shows featuring the writings of Nisei
(Japanese-Americans), the Triangle-Shirtwaist fire,
mind-altering cults, and Freud's recovered memory
controversy. He has been a regularly featured poet
on listener-sponsored KPFA, 99.4 FM radio in
Northern California.
Miller is married to Elise Peeples, novelist and
philosopher. Her books are Strands (novel)
and The Emperor Has a Body. She is also
founder of
Art Between Us,
a collaborative art and healing
organization, and Sound Rivers, a sound-healing
organization. They make their home in Berkeley,
California.
eshuhouse@yahoo.com
http://adamdavidmillerpoet.com
***********************************************************************************************************************************

Debby Rosenfeld's poetry and creative nonfiction have
appeared in Sage Trail Poetry Magazine, San Gabriel Valley Poetry Quarterly,
Street Spirit and elsewhere. She has guest-written nonfiction articles for
the blog of Dr. Pamela Peeke, the bestselling author and weight-loss expert,
whom she considers a mentor. Debby has worked in sales and has volunteered
teaching creative writing to elementary school students. She lives in upstate
New York with her husband, two sons and assorted pets.
Latif
Harris arrived for first time North Beach in 1959 where I met
Ginsberg and many of the poets of the Beat generation. Founding editor and
publisher of ANTE a letterpress magazine of writing and art 1963. Attended the
Berkeley Poetry Conference in Berkeley 1965 where he met Robert Creeley and
moved to New Mexico to study with him for 2 years. Left U.S. (for good!)? to
attended graduate school at University of Essex, lived and traveled in Europe
and Near East until 1972, returned to live in Marin County. Moved back to
S.F.1979. Worked with artist Gordon Wagner in performance pieces at the Vorpal
Gallery. Founded BANNAM PLACE readings in '83 where all the poets who were part
of the North Beach Community, including Jack Hirschman and Bob Kaufman (his last
reading). This was the core group that came together to do the SILVER
ANNIVERSARY edition of BEATITUDE.
For the next 20 years or so I spent most of my time doing work in Vajrayana
Buddhism with long retreats and pilgrimages to Nepal and Bhutan. Worked on the
English translation of two major Buddhist texts given by Lama Gyaltrul Rinpoche
and translated by Alan Wallace. Continued writing poems and journals and did
occasional readings.
Volunteered to do the Golden Anniversary of BEATITUDE which is turning out to
be an anthology of the 50 years of work plus a lot of new work poets who have
some connection to the original group who appeared in John Kelly's editions.
Just had a large reading of many of the poets at the SF Public Library.
Publication date is set for January 2008.
I have published 11 books of poetry, many reviews, critical works, and
articles in various journals. Most recent book published by BROWSER BOOKS, S.F.
"A Boddhisattva's Busted Truth"-2008, 120p, $14
Been living in Lower Haight area of SF with my wife of 26 years. One son who
teaches young, immigrant children in Santa Barbara.
latifpoet@mac.com
C
AROL DEE MEEKS
I am the 2007 NEW MEXICO SENIOR POET LAUREATE at " Amy Kitchener's Angels
Without Wings Foundation" contest. I won that title from this same contest in
2004 and 2005, and was the 2006 runner up. I placed two poems in the 73rd
Writer's Digest top 100. I hold memberships in BARDS OF A FEATHER, HIGH PRAIRIE
POETS of Roswell NM, NMSPS, and NFSPS. In 2004, I won six poetry contests. In
2005 I won five, and increased my wins in 2006. I have a Special Honorable
Mention at Bylines for poetry and two for short stories. I've seen poetry
published in Potpourri, Poe Magazine, Heart Songs, Inspirational Verses, Poet
Speak, Creative Juices, Herlands Flaming Tongues, 2006 Forrest Fest Anthology,
R. B.'S Viewpoint, Hodgepodge, Opened Eyes, The Rag, Our Piped Dreams, The
Diplomat, Under the Yucca, New Mexico State Poetry Society Newsletter, Poets'
Forum Magazine, Wt-In Spirit, The Southwest Region of Haiku Society of America,
The Poet Sanctuary, Bells Letters, Golden Words, Poet's Lane, and Litchfield
Review. I chair the committee for the bi-monthly contests held by the High
Prairie Poets New Mexico chapter of New Mexico State Poetry Society. This has
helped my poetry path grow and I've met some incredible people doing this.
Thanks again. Carol Dee Meeks 2007 Senior Poet Laureate of New Mexico
http://home.comcast.net/~pkmeeks/

Leah Brown
has been on stage from the age of 15 to the present. Having started out as a
background singer, she has progressed to doing stand-up comedy for many years,
and now has turned her creativity to writing and performing her poetry. She has
been published in the San Gabriel Valley Poetry Quarterly, and on BET’S
Def Poetry Jam website.
Leah is an Urban Poet, drawing inspiration from the world around her, and
the way she views this life. She writes from the depth of her spirit. She brings
a fresh new outlook and strength to the spoken word arena.
Her first volume of work, entitled "LeahsLand" will be out June 12, 2006.
www.LeahzLand.com
tiggyclay@yahoo.com
sandra kay aka: sandra, ttgp
blogger/poet/speaker/cnf writing coach/artist
in progress: memoir/cnf

Aline
Soules' work has appeared in journals, e-zines, and anthologies such
as The MacGuffin, 100 Words, Literature of the Expanding Frontier, Variations on
the Ordinary, and The Size of the World, a "flip" book of poetry and short
fiction, co-published with Nancy Ryan's The Shape of the Heart. Prose poems from
her manuscript Meditation on Woman have appeared in Kaleidowhirl, Tattoo
Highway, Edifice Wrecked, Poetry Midwest, Binnacle, Long Story Short, and the
Kenyon Review. She has an M.A. in English, an MFA in Creative Writing, and a
M.S.L.S. in Library Science.
She makes her living as a library faculty member at California State
University, East Bay and also teaches workshops, reads her work at events, and
engages in voice work (reading and singing).
soulesa@yahoo.com
Dane
Cervine's poetry was chosen by The Hudson Review for its New
Writers Edition, and over 100 of his poems have appeared in a wide variety
of magazines. Adrienne Rich chose Dane's poem The Jeweled Net of Indra
as the winning entry in the National Writers Union 2005 competition,
appearing in Poetry Flash as well as the SUN Magazine. Dane's poem
Accordions & Shotguns was chosen by Tony Hoagland as a finalist for the
Wabash Prize for Poetry, and appears in Purdue University's Sycamore Review
(Winter/Spring 2005). Dane was chosen as Poet of the Year in 2006 for
Cabrillo College's Porter Gulch Review in Santa Cruz.
Dane is a member of the Emerald Street Writers in Santa Cruz, California,
where he serves as Chief of Children's Mental Health for the county.

Gary Lehmann
Twice nominated for the Pushcart Prize, Gary Lehmann’s poetry and prose is
published in literary and popular journals in all parts of the world, over
100 publications per year. He is co-author and editor of a
book of poetry entitled The Span I Will
Cross [Process
Press, 2004]. His
poem “Reporting from Fallujah” was nominated for the 2006 Pushcart Prize,
and “First in Flight” has been nominated for 2007.
His most recent book, Public Lives and
Private Secrets [Foothills Publishing, 2005], features poems
about secret moments in the lives of well-known public figures. Look for his
forthcoming book entitled American
Sponsored Torture [FootHills Publishing] in May 2007.
It explores the moral implications of the American decision to
accept torture as a means of gathering information.
Visit his website at
www.garylehmann.blogspot.com
Kathleen
Lynch’s
collection Hinge (2006) won the Black Zinnias Press National Poetry Book
Competition (California Institute of Arts and Letters).
Her chapbooks include How to Build an Owl (Select Poet Series Award,
Small Poetry Press, 1995), No Spring Chicken (White Eagle Coffee Store
Press Award, 2001), Alterations of Rising (Small Poetry Press Select Poet
Series, 2001) and Kathleen Lynch - Greatest Hits (Pudding House
Publications Gold Invitational Series, 2002).
Her work (fiction and poetry) appears in several anthologies, including The
Next River Over–A Collection of Irish American Writing (New Rivers Press),
Times Ten: An Anthology of Northern California Poets
(Small Poetry Press), Who are the Rich and Where Do They Live?
(DePaul University Press), In a Fine Frenzy – Poets Respond to Shakespeare
(University of Iowa Press), Birds in the Hand – Fiction and Poetry about
Birds (Farrar Straus & Giroux) and
The Book of
Irish American Poetry from the Eighteenth Century to the Present
(University Press of Notre Dame).
Her poems
appear in many literary journals, including
Poetry, Nimrod, Spoon River
Poetry Review,
Chariton Review, Runes, The Laurel Review, Poetry Northwest, The Midwest
Quarterly, Two Rivers Review, Slipstream, Quarterly West,
and The Midwest Review. She received the
Spoon River Poetry Review Editor’s
Choice Award, the Salt Hill
Poetry Award, Two Rivers Review
Prize, Peregrine and Sow’s Ear prizes, and ten Pushcart
nominations.
She worked as
Coordinator of Writers In Performance, and Writers' Workshops for San Jose
Center for Poetry and Fiction,
served as board member for San Jose Center for Literature and Arts, taught
through Poets in the Schools (all grade levels), mentors individual poets, and
conducts Teachers’ In-Service training programs. Lynch also publishes fiction,
essays and reviews, and does free-lance editing.
She lives in Carmichael CA.
Web site: www.kathleenlynch.com

Storyteller
The Granny Apple-seed of Joy
On her retirement from counseling, Dr. Joan
Garcia – usually known as Granny, or The Frog Lady – embarked on a new endeavor:
producing songs and stories from the heart, music for children 2 to 102. She
draws upon the richness of her experience to create a bubbling fountain of
little “silly songs,” stories that wrap valued life lessons in humor and rhyme.
They allow the child in all of us to take joy in the simple things in life, to
laugh at the unexpected twists and turns life brings. She tells her tales from
memory, pulling the audience into her private world of frogs, aardvarks,
lizards, and other assorted creatures of the earth as she weaves journeys of the
imagination.
Her stories are designed for use in the
classroom, library, or the senior community. Dr. Garcia has shared many of her
tales – in schools, at Barnes and Noble and Bounty Books, at day-care centers,
in Senior communities, in a variety of poetry venues, and with the disabled --
with consistently positive response. She has been featured at poetry venues in
San Francisco and Walnut Creek, done performances in Davis, Concord, Rio Vista,
and other local communities. She anticipates continuing her “granny apple-seed”
journey, spreading her tales beyond the local community, through her
performances, through CDs (now numbering eighteen!) available on her website,
and through videos for public access television (Vacaville and Sacramento). For
information on performances or to purchase CDs, contact:
Joan Garcia
707-678-8549
jgarcia@onramp113.org
www.grannyspearls.com
MK
Chavez
is a Berkeley-based writer. She writes
poetry about the beauty that can be found in ugliness,
the mystery of feeling bad about feeling good, little
birds, big consequences, situs inversus, wanton sex, and
other conundrums.
To find out more about her, visit her
website at
www.mkchavez.com

Edward Coletti is a graduate of
Georgetown University and the Creative Writing Masters Program at San
Francisco State University. He is also a Vietnam veteran, fiction
writer, vocational rehab counselor and business consultant.
Publication credits include two separate editions of Light Year
(Bits Press Anthology), Tucumcari Literary Review, The New Verse
News, Orphic Lute, Kickass Review, InterGalactic Poetry Messenger,
Riverrun, Parting Gifts, Green's Magazine, Mediphors, Gryphon, The
Pedestal, Cafe Pushkin etc. Mr. Coletti is also indexed in
Granger's American Poets (Columbia Univ.) and was
Sonoma County, California’s Featured Writer in 2005.
Information about his book, thawts: selected poems of Edward
Coletti, is contained at
www.Amazon.com . Between Trellis & Glass was published by
dPress April 2006. Bringing Home the Bones, an epic
exploration of war, death, remains, superstition, belief, and closure
was published by dPress in June of 2006. He released Peace Planters
through his own Round Barn Press in September 2006.
Ed lives with his wife Joyce in Santa Rosa, California and can be
reached by email at
edcoletti@sbcglobal.ne
1. I think you'll enjoy Ed
Coletti's P3. It's not just a typical self-absorbed blog.
Each time I post I offer one each Political, Philosophical, and
Poetical piece - not typically about me. I haven't done as
many posts lately (and the current one is a bit dated) as in the
past, so, when you hit the link below, you also might want to browse
through past ones. However, I'd recommend that you make
any comments (encouraged) through the top one where comments are
more likely to be read.
http://edcolettip3.blogspot.com/
2. I'm also sending along this notification of a separate blog which
I reserve exclusively for poetry matters. It's Edward Coletti's
Poetry Blog. Today I announce several new titles from by Round
Barn Press. Please take a look and feel free to comment.
Ed
http://edwardcolettispoetryblog.blogspot.com/

ANDRENA ZAWINSKI, the daughter and
granddaughter of coal miners and steel mill workers. was born and
raised in and around Pittsburgh, PA. Zawinski now lives in Alameda,
CA and teaches writing at Laney College. Her experience as an
educator spans the gamut from early childhood through
post-secondary. She has been a poet-in-residence through the PA
Council on the Arts, International Poetry Forum, and W. PA Writing
Project at her alma mater University of Pittsburgh. Zawinski’s
background as an activist is as a feminist: she was a founder and
organizer with Gertrude Stein Memorial Bookshop Collective, Women
Against Violence in Pornography and Media, Radical Feminist
Organizing Committee, and worked with many pro-woman and anti-war
groups. Post 9-11, she was an organizer for a series of Bay Area
Poets for Peace readings.
She now runs the Women's Poetry Potluck and
Salon that meets every six weeks at San Francisco Bay Area poets'
homes as a social group.
Andrena Zawinski’s poems appear widely in
print and online. Some of her favorites include Gulf Coast, Haight
Ashbury Literary Journal, Nimrod, Quarterly West, Rattle,
Slipstream, San Francisco Reader, Viet Nam Generation; online
favorites include Adirondack Review, ForPoetry, Ginosko, Poemeleon,
Switched on Gutenberg Pedestal, and others. Her individual poems
have gathered many awards from Akron Art Museum, Alameda Arts
Council, Bay Area Poets Coalition, Black Bear Review Poetry of
Social Concern, Euphoria, Friends of Sacramento Library, Nob Hill
Pen Women, San Francisco Dancing Poetry, Sarasota Poetry Theater,
Triton Salute to the Arts, Paterson Literary Review’s Allen Ginsberg
Awards, and others along with several Pushcart Prize nominations.
Zawinski’s full collection, TRAVELING IN
REFLECTED LIGHT, was released in 1995 by Pig Iron Press as a Kenneth
Patchen competition winner; her chapbook, ZAWINSKI'S GREATEST HITS
1991-2001, is part of Pudding House's invitational and archival
series. TAKING THE ROAD WHERE IT LEADS was released in 2008 by Poets
Corner Press in Stockton, CA. SOMETHING ABOUT, another full
collection was released by Blue Light Press in San Francisco in
2009. Her first chapbook from Harris Publications, POEMS FROM A
TEACHER’S DESK, is out of print as is an online ELEGIES FOR MY
MOTHER collection from Autumn House and ThePittsburghQuarterly.
Zawinski has been Features Editor at
www.PoetryMagazine.com since 2000.
www.poetrymagazine.com/zawinski

Deema K. Shehabi
is a writer, editor, and
poet. She grew up in the Arab world and attended college in the US,
where she received an MA in journalism. Her poems have appeared in
several anthologies and literary journals including the Atlanta
Review, DMQ Review, The Poetry of Arab Women,
Crab Orchard, Valparaiso Review, Flyway, and The
Mississippi Review, to name a few. She was a finalist in the Drunken
Boat's 2006 panliterary competition. She currently resides in Northern
California with her husband and two sons.

Kim Addonizio's
numerous books include four poetry collections, most recently
What is This Thing
Called Love
(W.W. Norton); the novels
Little Beauties
and (forthcoming)
My Dreams Out in
the Street,
both from Simon & Schuster; a collection of stories from FC2,
In the Box Called
Pleasure;
and
The Poet's
Companion: A Guide to the Pleasures of Writing Poetry,
co-authored with Dorianne Laux (W.W. Norton). She also co-edited, with
Cheryl Dumesnil,
Dorothy Parker's
Elbow,
an anthology of writing on tattoos (Warner Books). Her essays, poetry, and
fiction have appeared widely in journals, anthologies and textbooks.
Addonizio's work has been recognized with two NEA Fellowships, a Guggenheim
Fellowship, a National Book Award nomination, a Pushcart Prize, and other
awards. She lives in Oakland, CA, and online at
www.kimaddonizio.com
Carol
Alena Aronoff, Ph.D.,
is a psychologist and writer. Dr. Aronoff
taught Eastern spirituality and healing
practices, imagery, meditation, and women's
health at San Francisco State University.
Currently, Dr. Aronoff resides in a rural
area of Hawaii working her land, meditating
and writing.
|

JOHN FOX
John Fox is a poet and certified poetry therapist. He is an associate professor
at the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco, California.
He also teaches in the Graduate School of Holistic Studies at John F. Kennedy
University in Orinda, California and the Institute for Transpersonal Psychology
in Palo Alto, California. John offers workshops at Esalen and Omega Institutes
and throughout the United States in hospitals, churches and schools.
He
is the author of Finding What You Didn't Lose: Expressing Your Truth and
Creativity Through Poem-Making and Poetic Medicine: The Healing Art of
Poem-Making (Jeremy P. Tarcher/G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1995, 1997). His work is
featured in The Soul of Creativity edited by Tona Pearce-Myers and
published by New World Library and In The Spirit of Writing: 60 Classic and
Contemporary Essays Celebrating the Writer's Life. He was recently included
in the four-part anthology series Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious:
Reflecting American Culture Through Literature and Art.
John is
the president of the National Association for Poetry Therapy 2003 - 2005. He
lives in Mountain View, California. If you are interested in contacting John
about programs for your organization, coordinating a workshop for him in your
area, or being on his mailing list - please write him at P. O. Box 60189 Palo
Alto, CA 94306 or email JFoxCPT@AOL.com
PRAISE FOR THE WORK OF JOHN FOX
"Having over ten years-experience of leading groups in the difficult task of
lifestyle behavior change, I left Fox's workshop on the healing art of
poem-making with profound patient-empowering skills: poetry a la Fox creates an
intimacy within the self capable of healing sorrows, shaping dreams, rendering
joys and aspirations. With Fox's skillful guidance, poem-making takes our
impediments to growth and turns them into catalysts.
- Peg Baim, RN, NP, Clinical Director, Center for Training,
Mind/Body Medical Institute, Harvard University Medical School
“It's Fox's ability to express with breathtaking clarity, his inner voice that
draws workshop participants to him.”
- Washington Post
Drawing from a splendidly various range of sources, John Fox guides you gently
into the wide realms where the shape of words connects the feeling heart and the
world.
- Jane Hirshfield
A
native Calgarian, Zaid Shlah now resides in Walnut
Creek, CA with his wife Randa. He obtained his MA in English from San Francisco
State University. His poetry has appeared in literary magazines and journals in
both Canada and the U.S. In May of 2005, he was awarded the American Academy of
Poets Award. His first book of poetry, Taqsim, has been published in the U.S.
and most recently in Canada (Frontenac House, 2006). Currently, he teaches
English at Solano Community College and creative writing at New College of
California, San Francisco.
www.frontenachouse.com/books/32/Taqsim/
Commander
Charles O. McCauley III, USN (RET), was born in North East, Maryland,
a small, shanty Irish fishing village along the Northeast River, at the head of
the Chesapeake Bay.
He graduated from the
University of Maryland, where he edited the underground newspaper, “TTTT,”
without getting caught by distraught deans. After graduation, he worked as an
associate editor for the Cecil Whig, a weekly newspaper in Elkton, Maryland, the
county seat.
As the Vietnam War
escalated, McCauley joined the Navy and flew various types of aircraft for
twenty years, until his retirement. He had two tours of duty in ‘Nam, where he
flew, under the umbrella of the CIA, clandestine missions in support of that
“other war,” in Laos and Cambodia.
Starting his second
career, McCauley became a First Vice President for a national commercial bank,
and an officer in a successful “startup” community bank, until retiring from the
banking industry after almost twenty years.
Having won several awards
for poetry, McCauley has published six books:
Sirens in the Sun, Northeast of Yesterday,
Word Warrior, War Lords on the Wind, West of Eden, and Apache Tango.
His work also found a way into in such publications as “Explorations (University
of Alaska Southeast),” “Poetry Letter and Literary Review,” “Barbaric Yawp,”
“Carquinez Poetry Review,” “Bay Area Poet’s Coalition,” “Poetalk,” “The
Gathering,” “Voices in Wartime,” and “Blue Unicorn (pending)."
c o mccauley
925.228.1161

The door to
the world of poetry opened for Gayle Eleanor
when she happened upon The Second Coming by William Butler Yeats
about twenty years ago. She subsequently read voraciously and began writing
herself about ten years ago. She strives to give voice to what lies outside
the box of civilization and what, for her, affirms both life and death. Her
work has appeared in Atlanta Review, Calyx, Hawaii Pacific Review,
Manzanita Quarterly, Sow’s Ear Poetry Review, Snowy Egret, and several
other publications. She has published two collections of poems: Grace
Happens (2001) and Nahanni (2002).
far right Gayle Eleanor, Bob
McNally, Cher Wollard and Cynthia Bryant
2006 Pleasanton Poetry, Prose & Arts
Festival

Jan Steckel
is an Oakland, California writer, a bisexual activist, and a former
pediatrician. Seventy of her short stories, poems and nonfiction pieces have
appeared in print and online publications such as Margin, Lodestar Quarterly,
Yale Medicine, and Scholastic Magazine. Her poetry chapbook, The Underwater
Hospital, comes out from Zeitgeist Press in 2006. She has performed her work as
a featured reader at over twenty West Coast venues. You can find more of her
work at www.jansteckel.com.
Contact Jan at jan.steckel@post.harvard.edu
Tshaka Menelik Imhotep
Campbell
Originally from
England, Tshaka
moved to the United
States at the ripe
old age of 10.
Raised on his
father’s teachings
of solidarity and
brought up on the
teachings of greats
from Garvey
‘Pan-Africanism’ to
William Churchill,
he adopted his
father’s intense
love of language. As
a performer, Tshaka
is recognized as an
accomplished artist
and
performer and
was voted one of the
25 people to know in
San Francisco.
Performance
accolades include
not only being a
member of the 2004
Nuyorican Poetry
National Poetry Slam
Team and the 2006
Hollywood National
Champion Slam Poetry
team, but he also
earned the Grand
Champion title at
the 2005 San
Francisco and 2007
Hollywood
Championships.
Similarly, his
writing reads as
well of the page as
it does in his live
performances. Tshaka
has toured
internationally, and
has been featured at
theatres from the
legendary Apollo
Theatre in New York
to the poetry Café
in London England;
as well as numerous
colleges, city fairs
and creative venues
throughout the
United States. He
also conducts
lectures, teenage
and adult workshops
in creative
writings, spiritual
verse and a number
of other related
topics.
Tshaka’s debut CD
'ONE' was released
in 2006, and
sophomore release
‘Bloodlines’ in
2009. He has
published a
collection of poems
entitled “TarMan”
and has released a
collection of short
stories, prose and
poetry in 2007
entitled ‘Muted
Whispers’ that are
currently available
in stores and
libraries.
Tshaka now resides
in London, England
and continues to ask
the world to Listen
Different
Tel: (917)359-7778
www.naturalkink.com
;
www.reverbnation.com/tshaka;
www.myspace.com/Tshakaisnaturalkink:
booking:
info@naturalkink.com;

Jim Lyle was a professional designer in Industrial, Interior, Graphic, and
Building Design for over thirty years. He was a founding partner in Pacific
Design Group, an Architectural, Industrial, Product, and Interior Design firm
located in Campbell, CA.. He also taught Project Management in the Design
department of San Jose State University for 5 years. Jim closed his business in
1991 to allow time for writing and painting.
He is nationally published and his first book "Things Seen in the Desert” was
released in 2001. In 1997, he moved to Lake County, CA and a year later was the
selected the first Poet Laureate of that County. He was a member of the
Editorial Board of Review for the Montserrat Review for five years.
He is a
frequent featured speaker in Northern California, and has been a guest lecturer
at Mission College, Menlo College, Phoenix University, Cogswell College and Lake
Community College; all in the greater bay area.
In 2003, Jim moved into the Veteran’s Home of California at Yountville. He
continues to be active in writing and speaking.
jimlyle@earthlink.net
707-844-2648
Ronda
Lawson
Ronda Lawson was writing poetry
long before she learned to hold a crayon. While still in high school she
created, implemented and taught a poetry class at the local community center.
She has won gold, silver, and bronze awards at county fairs, and received an
honorable mention at last year’s Pleasanton Poetry and Arts Festival in
Pleasanton, California. Her work has been published in a wide variety of
magazines including The Saturday Evening Post, Mobius, Byline, Hidden Oak, The
Advocate, Tucumcari Literary Review, and Pleiades. In addition, she has
published short fiction and numerous non-fiction articles, and has just
completed her first novel. “Kitchen Odysseys” is her first chapbook.
Ronda is the San Francisco office administrator for an
international public accounting firm. She currently lives on a cattle ranch in
the California hills with her long-time companion Doug, an elderly golden
retriever, an even more elderly cat, and a constantly changing array of wild
creatures. When not writing, which is seldom, Ronda enjoys
reading just about
anything, creating art, designing a fine meal for family and friends,
discovering a new wine, and watching the hills with a pencil in her hand.
www.rlawsonwriter.com

Patricia Wellingham-Jones
Former psychology researcher, writer, editor,
lecturer
has recently been published in Edgz,
Ibbetson Street Press, Underground Window, HazMat Review. She is a
three-time Pushcart Prize nominee. Her newest books are Belt of Transit
(PWJ Publishing) and Hormone Stew (Snark Publishing); also published
is Don’t Turn Away: Poems about Breast Cancer. Her website is
www.wellinghamjones.com

ROBERT SWARD has taught at Cornell University, the Iowa Writers'
Workshop, and UC Santa Cruz. A Fulbright scholar and Guggenheim Fellow, he
was chosen by Lucille
Clifton to receive a Villa Montalvo Literary Arts Award. His 25 books
include: Four Incarnations (Coffee House Press), now in its second
printing; Heavenly Sex; The Collected Poems (1957-2004); and
The Toronto Islands, a bestseller.
Born and raised
in Chicago, Sward served in the U.S. Navy in the combat zone during the
Korean War and later worked for CBC Radio and as book reviewer and feature
writer for The Toronto Star and The Globe & Mail.
An Internet pioneer,
Sward was among the first to embrace the medium as a viable venue for poetry
and the oral tradition. For more, see:
1. Garrison
Keillor reads "God is in the Cracks" (audio file)
Garrison
Keillor reads title poem.
NEW 1
minute movie
2. New Blog / poet journal -
http://www.robertsward.com
robert@robertsward.com
831.426.5247
Connie Post

Connie Post was the First Poet Laureate of Livermore, California.
(2005-2009). During her term, she created two popular reading series: “Wine
and Words” and “Ravenswood”. She also started a youth poetry critique group
and wrote over 25 poems for various city and civic events which resulted in
her most recent book “In a City of Words” .
Connie’s poetry is widely published. Her work has appeared in the
following:
Calyx,
Kalliope, Cold Mountain Review, Chiron Review, Comstock Review, DMQ
Review, Dogwood, Iodine Poetry Journal, Main Street Rag, White
Pelican Review, Monterey Poetry Review, Carquinez Poetry Review,
California Quarterly, Tipton Poetry Journal, RiverSedge, Up The Staircase,
Oberon, Wild Goose Poetry Review, Apparatus Magazine, Mobius, Song of the
San Joaquin, and The Toronto Quarterly.
She is the author of six books of poetry and has
presented at many Bay Area readings. She has earned over ninety awards for
her poetry. She is a two time winner of the Grand Prize Lydia Wood Award at
the Las Positas Spring Arts contest. In 2008, she was one of four runner’s
up in the Calyx Lois Cranston Memorial Awards. She was a finalist in the
2007, 2008 & 2009 Muriel Craft Bailey Awards (Comstock Review). She was the
winner of the 2009 Dirty Napkin Cover Prize and the 2009 Winner of the
Caesura Poetry Awards (Poetry Center San Jose).
Her next book “Trip Wires” will be released in 2010 from Finishing
Line Press.
Connie has been a key note speaker at many events, and in 2005
presented her poetry on the nationally syndicated radio program “West Coast
Live”. She presents poetry and discussion on the subject of parenting,
poetry and autism to local colleges and affiliated groups.
www.poetrypost.com
Peter Bray
I grew up in the San Francisco Bay area, graduating from U.C.
Berkeley and have worked as a rocket design engineer, illustrator, graphics
designer, corporate manager, caregiver, toilet and sewer repairing plumber
and handyman. Why? They were things I found of interest along with writing
poetry for the past 30 years, publishing chapbooks, and writing songs for
the past 20. I semi-regularly attend Open Mikes in the Bay Area, am a member
of The Ina Coolbrith Circle, Bay Area Poets Coalition, Chaparral Poets, and
West Coast Songwriters Association. I continue to write and publish Taproot
& Aniseweed, an eclectic, rambling newsletter, formerly monthly but now
becoming a once in a while publication via my Macintosh G3 with Quark
software. I have a weekly poetry column with Listen & Be Heard News in
Vallejo, can be followed on three websites; Joel Fallon's
www.poetrymatters.150.com (See Benicia Poets),
www.peterbray.org and
www.sonador.com/pedro . Benicia,
California is home with my wife Janice and our two cats, White Henry and
that former feral street cat, Dirty Harry Potter. My 4th chapbook, 'First
Annual Report of Sorts' is in the works and is scheduled to be out in Spring
2006.

Jim
Ott’s poetry
and short stories have appeared in several small press literary
journals, and he is both a columnist for the Tri-Valley Herald and the
co-host of a television show in the Tri-Valley about books and
reading—which he created in the late-1990s—called "In A Word."
In 1999, Jim proposed
the idea for the city-sponsored poet laureate position that was adopted
by the Civic Arts Commission and City Council. He was invited to serve
as Pleasanton's second poet laureate from 2001-2003. He is also a
co-founder of Pleasanton’s Annual Poetry, Prose, and Arts Festival, and
is an adjunct English professor at Las Positas College, and the
President/CEO of UNCLE Credit Union.
Because of his work in
the area of promoting poetry, Jim has been featured in the San Francisco
Chronicle and in the Wall Street Journal, and he has appeared on KQED FM
radio.
jott@unclecu.org

Ellen Bass's
most recent book of poetry, The Human Line,
was published by Copper Canyon Press in 2007 and was named a Notable
Book of 2007 by the San Francisco Chronicle. She co-edited (with
Florence Howe) the groundbreaking No More Masks! An Anthology of
Poems by Women (Doubleday, 1973) and has published several volumes
of poetry, including Mules of Love (BOA, 2002) which won the
Lambda Literary Award. Her work has been published in many journals and
magazines including The Atlantic, The American Poetry Review, The New
Republic, The Progressive, and The Kenyon Review. Among her
awards for poetry are a Pushcart Prize, the Elliston Book Award, The
Pablo Neruda Prize from Nimrod/Hardman, the Larry Levis Prize
from Missouri Review, and the New Letters Prize. Her
nonfiction books include Free Your Mind: The Book for Gay, Lesbian
and Bisexual Youth and Their Allies (HarperCollins, 1996), I
Never Told Anyone: Writings by Women Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse
(HarperCollins, 1983) and The Courage to Heal: A Guide for Women
Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse (HarperCollins, 1988, 2008) which
has been translated into twelve languages. She teaches in the MFA
writing program at Pacific University and at conferences and workshops
nationally and internationally.
www.ellenbass.com

|
Molly Fisk
was born in San Francisco. She earned her B.A. from Radcliffe
College/Harvard University, her M.B.A. from Simmons College
Graduate School of Management, and began writing at the age of
35. She's the author of
Listening to
Winter,
Terrain (with Dan
Bellm and Forrest Hamer), and the letterpress chapbook
Salt Water Poems. (See
Books/CDs)
Molly has received fellowships in
poetry from the National Endowment for the Arts, the California
Arts Council, and the Marin Arts Council. She has won the
Robinson
Jeffers Tor House Prize in Poetry, the Billee Murray Denny
Prize, and the National Writer's Union, Santa Cruz/Local 7
Prize.
Linda McCarriston says about Molly's
book Listening to Winter:
"...[an] intellectually self-aware, bold and brilliant
re/consideration of the culturally paradigmatic problem of
incest. In lacunae and ellipses as artful as the poems
themselves, she shows to the mind the heart's wounds and forces
it to make of them an answer. Complex, memorable,
Listening to Winter makes vivid
the real and dangerous work of what is called, contemptuously,
'confessionalism,' meditating, from its most intimate
perspective, on the nature and costs of 'The Old Order.'" |

Aptly named;
-GO got his start
on the spoken word scene in 2000 writing and performing his children's
poetry under the name Uncle -GO and hasn't stopped moving since.
Currently, -GO spends most his time producing commercial video projects
for his co. 3rd
Eye Collective, but his list of artistic ventures in the
last 2 years include:
-Producing 5 live poetry/conscience hip-hop
events (2 including live painting and comedy)
-Producing/directing the TV show- 3rd Eye
Collective presents: Artistic Insomnia
(channel27- Vacaville, CA)
-Producing an album of spoken word poetry set
to music- 3rd Eye Collective presents-
Weapons of Mass Instruction: the Evolution
Will Be Televised
-SLAM/Spoken Word performance at several
small venues from San Jose to Sacramento
under the names -GO and Uncle -GO
-Camera/Asst. Producer- Love Jones
(Upperroom Productions: Poetry/Neo-soul)
-Consultant for "The Voice of Our Opinion"
(Solano County Adult Literacy Newspaper)
-Perform/Speak on KPFA Berkeley, Ca
-GO has worked tirelessly to promote Bay area arts in general, but his
main love and focus has been on: Video Production, Spoken Word, SLAM,
Freestyle and Conscience Hip-Hop. It is the goal of -GO to be a lead
promoter in the Bay-Area Poetry evolution.
-GO mailto:
artisticinsomnia@tmail.com
(707) 803 3393
artisticinsomnia@tmail.com
3rd Eye Collective
http://www.artisticinsomnia.com
www.artisticinsomnia.com
-GO
(707) 803 3393
artisticinsomnia@tmail.com
3rd Eye Collective Productions/Agency
Myspace.com/artisticinsomnia

Marc Elihu Hofstadter
was born in New York City in
1945. He graduated from Swarthmore College and earned a Ph.D. in
Literature from the University of California at Santa Cruz in 1975.
He taught American Literature at Santa Cruz, at the Universite
d'Orleans in France on a Fulbright in 1977-78, and at Tel Aviv
University in 1978-79. He served as the Librarian of the San
Francisco Municipal Railway from 1982 until his retirement in 2005.
Marc won the Whetstone Poetry Award for 2004. He has published
five volumes of poetry: House of Peace,
Visions,
Shark, Luck
and
Rising at 5 AM, all books are available from
www.Amazon.com .
He
has published poetry, translations and essays in many magazines,
including Talisman, Exquisite Corpse, The Hawai'i Review, The
South Carolina Review, The Malahat Review, Rattle, Home Planet News,
Pearl, Confrontation, Whetstone and The Redwood Coast
Review. He lives with his partner David Zurlin at 2301 Tice
Creek Drive, #1, Walnut Creek, CA 94595-5274. His phone number is
925-934-8194 or you may e-mail him at
mhofstad@ifn.net

Debralee
Pagan (Deborah Fruchey) has spent much of her
life in churches, 12-Step meetings,
and mental hospitals. Now she
lives in Walnut Creek. Her sixth chapbook, Not Without
My Latte, is being produced online by
Languageandculture.net. She holds a monthly reading,
Pagan's Place, which is meant to replace the beloved but
folded Primo Poets. Her newest venture is a newsletter,
Strictly East,
for poets past the Tunnel. It is currently
available by email, but she hopes to build a website with
weekly updates.
Deborah published her first
novel, the award-winning comedy The Unwilling Heiress,
at the age of 25. Her goals now are a Master's Degree,
another book contract, and a flat stomach.

Albert J. Rothman
albroth@comcast.net
I was born 1924 and raised in Brooklyn NY. I moved to SF Bay Area in
1948. BS Columbia; PhD (chemistry and chemical engineering) UC-Berkeley.
Since retiring in 1986 I have written personal essays, memoir, poetry,
and short stories. A memoir of my childhood is ready for publication.
I am an avid hiker, the source for numerous nature writings, and a
classical music lover and collector. I belong to several writers¹
groups, including Tri Valley Writers, Ina Coolbrith Poetry Group, and
attend writing classes at Las Positas College.
I received prizes in Ina Coolbrith Circle poetry contests, 1997-2004,
First Prize and publication in The Poets¹ Edge Magazine. Poems and prose
were published in Northwoods Journal, Dan River Anthology, two Bristol
Banner Books, and Drumvoices Revue 2005. I have won awards and
publication in annual Las Positas College Anthologies, 1996 through
2005, and other poetry awards, including Sky Blue Waters, California
Federation of Chaparral Poets, California State Poetry Society, Dancing
Poetry contest, 2005, etc.

Deborah Grossman is the
City of
Pleasanton’s 6th Poet Laureate.
To discover what she’s up to with programs
ranging from BOO-etry, a Halloween reading of “The Raven” to “Poetry
Rocks in Many Languages” with poems read in Spanish, French and Italian,
visit
www.facebook.com/PleasantonPoetry.
A poet, food and wine journalist, and essayist, Deborah published
Goldie and Me, a book about the many facets of
freedom, family and friendship through the lens of poetry in 2006. Her
poems and essays have won awards at the Las Positas College Literary
Arts Contest, the Ina Coolbrith Circle’s Annual Poet’s Dinner, the
Pleasanton Poetry and Arts Festival, and the Alameda County Fair.
Deborah contributes to publications such as the Wine Enthusiast,
Flavor & the Menu, and the San Francisco Chronicle. Deborah
hails from Wilmington, Del. and received her postgraduate degree from
the U, of London, England. She’s a member of the American Society of
Journalists and Authors (ASJA). She likes to travel wine country back
roads with her husband Michael and read umpteen newspapers, books, and
magazines.
Contact Deborah @
PleasantonPoetry@gmail.com or join the Pleasanton Poetry community @
www.facebook.com/PleasantonPoetry .
Goldie and Me is available on
at
www.amazon.com .To peek at her wine and food writing, visit
www.deborahgrossman.com
Rashna Owens
RASHNA Heart Poet
Resides in Castro Valley, Ca. the founder/owner of “POEMS FROM MY HEART TO TOUCH
YOUR HEART” CD AND BOOK/RED I GRAVY AFFAIR a poetry troupe of various artists
who comes together to entertain.
My goal is to reach a new level of poetry through song and speak out against
violence and various social issues. To enjoy life and continue to enhance with
ALLAH (GOD) spirituality and mentality.
I love to love all! I speak IN PEACE AND IN LOVE!
rashna.owens@worldnet.att.net

Terry Ehret
is a creative writing and
composition teacher, and one of the founders of the innovative Sixteen
Rivers Press, a hands-on publishing collective run by and for
San Francisco Bay Area Poets.
As the Sonoma County
poet laureate from 2004-2006, she visited classrooms all across the county,
helped organize and promote the poetry program at the annual Sonoma County
Book Festival, and hosted bilingual workshops, writing programs, and
readings, including the Poetry on the Bus project and the Poetry of
Remembrance reading for Petaluma’s El Dia de los Muertos. She has
also launched The Sonoma County Writers’ Guide, a web page hosted by the
Literary Arts Guild which serves as an on-line community bulletin board for
local writers.
She has previously
published three collections of poetry, most recently Translations
from the Human Language. Literary awards include the National Poetry
Series, California Book Award, and Pablo Neruda Poetry Prize.
Terry teaches private
creative writing workshops through the Sitting Room in Cotati, and is
available for manuscript consultation. Contact her through her e-mail at
tehret99@comcast.net .
For more information
about Sixteen Rivers Press, check out the website at
www.sixteenrivers.org .
To view the Sonoma
County Writers’ Guide webpage, go to
www.socobookfest.org
and click on the Writer’s Guide feature from the menu.

Kim Shuck is a mixed Tsalagi, Sauk/Fox and Polish
educator, writer and weaver. Shuck has had myriad jobs, which include
writing math curricula, frothing cappuccino, teaching at the university
level and being the mom of three kids who are even now entering teen hood.
She has attended way too much school, one product of which is an MFA. Her
poetry has been published nationally and internationally. These publications
include Shenandoah, Cream City Review and the En’owken Journal. In late
summer of 2005 she made a trip with poets to Jordan in the interest of peace
and communication. Her poetry manuscript Smuggling Cherokee, won the
2005 first book award from the Native Writer’s Circle of the Americas, it
was published in December 2005 by Greenfield Review Press. She is a
co-curator for the Native American Cultural Center in San Francisco.
kshuck@tsoft.net

Matt Miller was born and raised in
Lowell, MA. He earned a BA from Yale University and an MFA in Creative Writing
from Emerson College. A former Visiting Assistant Professor of Writing at New
England College, Miller has taught also at Stanford University, Harvard
University, Endicott College, Cambridge College, and the New Hampshire State
Prison for Men. His work has been published in Third Coast, DMQ Review,
Entelechy International, Renovation Journal, Boston Magazine, the Lowell Sun,
LiteraryTraveler.com, and is forthcoming in the Poetry Nation Review. He has
been nominated for three Pushcart Prizes and his first book, Cameo Diner: Poems,
was published in 2005. He is currently a Wallace Stegner Fellow in Poetry at
Stanford University. He lives in East Palo Alto, CA with his wife, Emily Meehan,
and their daughter, Delaney Grace.
matthew_miller@uml.edu
David
Alpaugh’s poetry, fiction, drama, and criticism have appeared in over
a hundred literary journals and anthologies, including Poetry, Exquisite
Corpse, The Formalist, Modern Drama, Light, Wisconsin Review, Zyzzyva, and
California Poetry from the Gold Rush to the Present. His collection
Counterpoint won the Nicholas Roerich Poetry Prize from Story Line Press and
his chapbooks have been published by Coracle Books and Pudding House
Publications. His essay “The Professionalization of Poetry,” serialized by
Poets & Writers Magazine in 2003, drew hundreds of emails and letters plus
wide discussion on the internet where his poetry has also frequently appeared.
A graduate
of Rutgers University and the University of California, Berkeley, where he was a
Woodrow Wilson and Ford Foundation fellow, Alpaugh operates Small Poetry Press,
a chapbook design and printing service and edits its Select Poets Series. He has
taught at the University of California Extension; publishes The Carquinez
Poetry Review; hosts the popular Second Sunday Poetry Readings in Crockett;
and is a member of the board of trustees of The Ina Coolbrith Circle, a
statewide association of California poets & historians.
You may
reach David at
davidalpaugh@comcast.net
Check out a live interview with David Alpaugh on
www.NewVoices.com
"Not Your Same
Old Radio" LadyBugLive, then click on Poet's Lane program and the icon next to David
Alpaugh's name.
Floriana Hall,
author and poet, founded and coordinate a group of local poets (Akron,
Ohio) who meet once a month at the Cuyahoga Falls Library in Cuyahoga
Falls, Ohio, at two PM the second Wednesday. We (about 20 of us) enjoy
each other's creations and also have a mission. This year we are
helping ACCESS and Battered Women's Shelter at Christmas. I founded
this group seven years ago and have helped the poets get published --
we have three books published which I put together and edited, THROUGH
OUR EYES, Poems of Beautiful Northeast Ohio; POET'S NOOK POTPOURRI; and
TOUCHING THE HEARTS OF GENERATIONS. These three books may be bought
from me at HAFLORIA@cs.com
for $10 each plus shipping of $1.50 to $2.00. My website is
www.expage.com/flossiesbooknook This website also promotes my five
nonfiction inspirational books.
I also teach poetry at
www.LssWritingSchool.com under YOU, ME, AND POETRY.
Doug Stout, Healdsburg Literary Laureate (1999 - 2000)
1st prize haiku contest (Don Sherwood radio show) 1960; lived in Japan off
and on 1977, published 10 English texts for college students - from 1977;
Fulbright teacher in Thailand, 1974-1975; English Department San Francisco
State University, 1955-1976; USN, 1943-1945, co-founder Healdsburg Farmers
Market, 1977- present, two books of poetry - Urgent News! and
Sometimes I'm Surprised; co-editor of Present at the Creation,
an anthology of poets writing about writing poetry' three unpublished
novels, dramaturg - Sonoma County Repertory in the 90's, National Comedy
Prize - Ukiah Players, 1992, miscellaneous publications including first
prize Tiny Lights essay contest, 2005 (?)
mailing address: 8383 W. Dry Creek Rd., Healdsburg, CA
95448; e-mail:
dalstout@aol.com.