CONTRIBUTOR'S NOTES: O--T

GREAGOIR Ó DUILL was born in Dublin, raised in County Antrim and educated in Belfast, Dublin and Maynooth, where he took a Ph. D. in English. Longtime resident in the Donegal Gaeltacht and associated with the Poets' House there, he was recently lecturer in contemporary literature in the Irish Department in Queen's University, Belfast, and now lectures in creative writing in Waterford Institute of Technology. He is author of eight collections of original poetry in Irish and editor of two anthologies, his selected poems, Rogha Dánta, appeared in 2001. Recent poems have been published by the Irish Times, Cadenza, Cork Literary Review, Heliotrope, South, the Shop, New Hibernia Review, Studies, Cyphers, Scintilla, Poetry Ireland Review and Stand. A collection from Doghouse, Tralee, titled New Room Windows, will be published shortly.

SOPHIE REYNOLDS is a writer living in London, where she is currently studying for an MA in Creative and Life Writing at Goldsmiths College. She grew up in Bath, and studied English, Writing and Performance at the University of York. She has written both poetry and prose from a young age, and has aspirations to write a novel.


S. THOMAS SUMMERS is a teacher of Writing and Literature at Wayne Hills High School in Wayne, NJ. He is the
author of two poetry chapbooks: Death settled well (Shadows Ink Publications, 2006) and Rather, It Should Shin (Pudding House Press, 2007). Summers's poems have appeared in several literary journals and reviews: The English Journal, MiPo, 2River View, The Pedestal Magazine, The Loch Raven Review, etc. Currently, Summers is completing a volume of American Civil War poetry - Private Hercules McGee: Poems of the Civil War. He lives in Northern NewJersey with his wife and children.

NANCY ELLIS TAYLOR is a Los Angele-based writer who gives readings locally several times a year. Most
recently her work has been featured in What Wildness is This: Women Write about the Southwest (Univ.of Texas Press.)

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