
Alumni
Samar Abulhassan (2004)
Erika Adams (2003, Printmaking/Drawing)
Erika Adams studied art in California and New Mexico, focusing on printmaking and drawing. Inspired by the natural world, she is currently living, working and teaching in Columbus, GA, where it is green and buggy.
Email: eatingdogpress@hotmail.com
Cristina Aquino (2003)
Madeleine Hope Arthurs (2001)
Cara Bahir (2001)
Melanie Baker (2004)
Karin Batten (2002)
Karin Batten earned a Master of Fine Arts from Hunter College, New York and a diploma in Fine Arts from St. Martins/Central School, London, England. Among the many grants which she received, are a Pollock-Krasner in painting, an Artists’ Fellowship from the New York Foundation for the Arts in painting, from the New York Metropolitan Authority to provide a ceramic mural for the NY subway system and from the New York Council on the Arts to create a mural park in New York City. Batten has been showing her paintings at the June Kelly Gallery, New York for the last twelve years and in Zurich, by Galerie a-16. Her work is in the permanent collections of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Continental Insurance Company, Salomon Brothers Inc., Pfizer Inc., Reliance National and the Hotel Millenium in New York.
Ron Binion (2004 and 2005)
Amanda Boekelheide (2006)
Amanda Boekelheide is a performer and writer living in New York City. For the last 10 years she has been a member of Liminal Performance Group, a west coast based ensemble.
Pamela Booker (2001)
Marianne Boruch (2006)
Marianne Boruch is the author of five collections of poetry and two books of essays. Her awards include two Pushcart Prizes, the Terrence DePres Award from Parnassus, two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship. Her sixth collection of poems Grace, Fallen From will be published in spring, 2008, by Wesleyan University Press. She lives in West Lafayette, Indiana.
Shannon Brady (2002)
Charles Browning (2004 and 2005)
Charles Browning is represented by Jack the Pelican gallery, Brooklyn, NY.
Web: www.foundrysite.com/browning
Peter Burr (2004, Animation/Performance/Two-Dimensional Work)
Sifting through and piecing together his leftovers, Peter creates narrative collage worlds. His current albatross (Slow Dance Recyttal 2005) is a collaborative music recital/video performance set in a glowing inflatable fantasy world.
Email: hooliganship@gmail.com
Web: www.hooliganship.com
Finn Campman (2004 and 2005)
Xochiquetzal Candelaria (2004)
Xochi Candelaria’s work has appeared in The Nation, Seattle Review, Solo: A Journal of Poetry, GSU Review, Gulf Coast Magazine, Indiana Review, Massachusetts Review, Louisiana Literature, and the Homestead Review. She has also written articles for the online journal: Solo Ella and has been anthologized in June Jordan’s Poetry for the People: A Revolutionary Blueprint, published by Routledge Press and in the 2002 Women in Literature and Letters Anthology: Mamibaile.
James Cañón (2001)
James Cañón was born and raised in Columbia. He moved to New York to study English and later earned his MFA in Creative Writing from Columbia University. He was awarded the 2001 Hefield Prize for Excellence in Fiction, and his book Tales from the Town of Widows was published by Harper Collins in 2007.
Eddie Cardona (2005, Playwright)
Ed Cardona, Jr. Puerto Rican American Playwright. Columbia University School of the Arts, MFA candidate ‘06. Member of HPRL (Hispanic Playwrights in Residence Lab) INTAR Theatre.
Email: edcaronajr@aol.com
Rebecca Chace (2001)
Rebecca Chace is the author of Chautauqua Summer: Adventures of a Late-Twentieth-Century Vaudevillian (1993) and Capture the Flag: A Novel (1999).
Adam Chilenski (2001)
Shebana Coelho (2006)
Shebana Coelho is a radio and television documentary producer and a writer. She received a 2004 Fiction Fellowship from the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) and is currently working on a short story collection and a novel.
Susan Cummings (2002)
Douglas Danoff (2005, Writer)
One of Doug’s short stories will appear in the next issue of Night Train. Recently he was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in nonfiction and announced as a finalist for the 2006 Tobias Wolff Award for Fiction. Also, he was named runner-up for the 2005 BOMB Fiction Prize and the 2005 H.E. Francis Short Fiction Award and a finalist for the 2005 Katherine Anne Porter Prize for Fiction and the 2005 William Van Wert Memorial Fiction Award. He was just awarded a grant by the Jerome Foundation and fellowships for residencies in 2006 by the Anderson Center (nonfiction) and the Saltonstall Foundation for the Arts (fiction). He was recently awarded the Danahy Fiction Prize. His winning story, “The Trader Thief” (an early draft of which Doug worked on during his 2005 Hall Farm residency), will appear in the next issue of Tampa Review, the literary magazine known for not only its fine content but also its smartly illustrated hardcover format.
Xue Di (2006)
Xue Di is a Chinese poet whose books in translation include An Ordinary Day and Circumstances, among others. His books in Chinese include Hui Yi (Remembering), Chan Li (Trembling), and Meng Li (Dream Talk). He is a recent recipient of a Lannan Foundation Fellowship.
Suzanne Dottino (2003)
Suzanne Dottino received her MFA in writing (nonfiction) from Columbia University. Her work has appeared in Brooklyn Rail, Brooklyn Review, Portable Muse, AAA Worldwide and other literary journals. Her plays have been produced at The Culture Project, Artists of Tomorrow Festival and was a finalist in the Samuel French Short Play Competition 2005. She is the Literary Director for Sunday Night Fiction Series at KGB Bar and the editor of the forthcoming KGB Bar Fiction Anthology. She is currently at work on her book, Despite Herself.
Hannah Dougherty (2006)
Hannah Dougherty is an American born painter currently living and working in Berlin. Her large scale paintings and installations draw inspiration from literature, folktales, and mythologies. Her most recent works have been presented at the Berlinische Gallerie, Museum for Modern Art in Berlin.
Alan Edelstein (2001)
Doris Feigl (2001)
Ciara Foster (2004, Textile Artist)
Email: ceyara@claus.com
Web: www.freewebs.com/ciarafoster
Joanna Fuhrman (2004)
Joanna Fuhrman is the author of three collections of poetry published by Hanging Loose Press, Freud in Brooklyn (2000), Ugh Ugh Ocean (2003) and Moraine (2006). Her poems have appeared in many journals and anthologies including Lit, New American Writing, The New York Times, American Letters and Commentary, and American Poetry: Next Generation. She is a graduate of the University of Washington’s MFA program, which awarded her the Academy of American Poet’s Prize and the Joan Grayson Award.
Linda Ganjian (2005, Sculpture)
Linda Ganjian is a New York-based artist whose primary focus is sculpture. Her work has been exhibited in NYC, New Jersey, The Netherlands, Scotland, and Armenia. She has received grants from the Pollack Krasner Foundation and Artslink. She received her B.A. from Bard College in 1992 and her MFA from Hunter College, City University of New York in 1998.
Email: lindaganjian@yahoo.com
Web: www.lindaganjian.net
Merrill Garbus (2004 and 2005)
Rebecca Gates (2004)
Ethan Gilsdorf (2004, Poetry/Non-Fiction)
Email: ethan@ethangilsdorf.com
Web: www.ethangilsdorf.com
Megan Greene (2002)
Karen Grenke (2002 and 2003)
David Groff (2005)
David Groff is the author of Theory of Devolution, selected by Mark Doty as one of five volumes published in the 2002 National Poetry Series. He is the coauthor of The Crisis of Desire: AIDS and the Fate of Gay Brotherhood. His poetry and prose have appeared in The American Poetry Review, Poetry, The Georgia Review, and The Iowa Review.
Dan Gunderman (2001, Writing/Screenwriting)
Dan is a writer and proud Queens resident.
Email: dan@baldandeffective.com
Web: www.baldandeffective.com
Tim Guthrie (2005)
Tim Guthrie is a mixed media and multi media artist who works in a broad range of media. He is also an Associate Professor at Creighton University in Omaha, NE. He was recently awarded an Independent Artist Fellowship in Film (animation) by the Nebraska Arts Council, and he has a solo show scheduled for the Bemis Underground (Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, Omaha) that will open on August 11, 2006. His work has been shown in numerous galleries and museums throughout the country and has shown internationally, as well.
Web: timguthrie.creighton.edu
Erica Harris (2003 and 2005)
Terrence Healy (2003)
Leslie Hirst (2004, Painting/Installation)
Leslie Hirst is a visual artist who combines found objects with painted imagery as a means for creating works that are part map and part maze. She currently keeps a studio in Baltimore, MD, where she teaches at the Maryland Institute College of Art and Towson University.
Email: Lhirst315@yahoo.com
Lucy Honig (2006)
Lucy Honig is the author of Open Season and The Truly Needy, which won the 1999 Drue Heinz Literature Prize. At Hall Farm, under the influence of frog song, her new group of stories began to knit together into a novel.
Susanna Horng (2002)
Susanna Horng teaches writing to undergraduates at New York University in the General Studies Program.
Andrew Hurley (2002 and 2003)
Mariko Jesse (2005)
I am half Japanese and half English. As well as working as a freelance illustrator, I do lithography, intaglio and Japanese woodblock printing and have exhibited around the world. I currently split my time between HK, Tokyo and London.
Email: mariko.jesse@usa.net
Web: www.monsters.co.uk and www.marlenaagency.com
Robert Dean Johnson (2006)
Robert Dean Johnson lives in Oklahoma with his wife, the writer Julie Hensley. His essays and stories have appeared in several journals, including Ascent, F. Scott Fitzgerald Review, New Orleans Review, Santa Clara Review, and The Southern Review.
Cassandra C. Jones (2004, Animation/Installation/Photography)
Cassandra C. Jones received her BFA from California Collage of Art and her MFA from Carnegie Mellon University in Interdisciplinary Art. Her work has been shown in venues throughout America and Europe including Ares Electronica in Austria, Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, The Bayannale in San Francisco and Portland Institute for Contemporary Art. Currently, she is represented by the illustrious Nathan Larramendy Gallery in Ojai, CA and is deep in collaboration with the boys of HOOLIGANSHIP on SLOW DANCE RECYTTAL, an intimate live music/animation/performance.
Email: cassandrac@gmail.com
Web: cassandrac.googlepages.com
Heather Smith Jones (2003)
Heather Smith Jones earned her M.F.A. from The University of Kansas with departmental honors. Heather combines image, abstraction, text, and pattern in her work and mixes her own watercolor and egg tempera paint. In her drawings she pierces the paper with needle sized holes to create a texture, a method she calls “pinhole.” Heather Smith Jones lives in Lawrence, Kansas with her husband, Matt Jones, who is a woodworker.
Email: contact@heathersmithjones.com
Website: http://www.heathersmithjones.com
Update: Heather’s blog- http://hrsj.wordpress.com
Aaron Kahn (2004 and 2005)
April Kao (2002)
Catherine Kapphahn (2002)
Bill Kelly (2002)
Dylan Kidd (2004)
Dylan Kidd is the writer and director of Roger Dodger, winner of the 2002 New York Film Critics Circle award for best first film, and P.S. (2004).
Patty Kim (2006)
Email: pattykimart@gmail.com
Website: http://pattykimart.com
Suji Kwock Kim (2006)
Suji Kwock Kim is the author of Notes from the Divided Country, which was chosen by Yusef Komunyakaa for the 2002 Walt Whitman Award of the Academy of American Poets. She lives in New York City and San Francisco.
Fawn Krieger (2005, Sculpture)
I am a do-it-yourself builder who carefully chooses her foundations. I discover ways to build outward instead of upward, and make more space by occupying it. Using references to fantasy and theatrical sets, I place my work in public settings that promote social access and are tailored to physical engagement, challenging the possibilities of personal and collective space.
Email: fromfawn@yahoo.com
Web: www.fawnkrieger.com and www.rooproject.info
Jessica Lamb-Shapiro (2001)
Michelle Lariat (2002, Painting/Drawing)
Lisa Lerner (2003)
David Leventhal (2002)
Ruth Levine (2002)
Cynthia Lin (2005)
Cynthia Lin makes hyper-detailed drawings of skin based on magnified computer scans that record every wrinkle and blemish. They explore conflicting experiences: distance/intimacy, seductive/repulsive, familiar/strange, microcosmic/macroscosmic. Cynthia Lin has received a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship in Painting and Drawing.
Email: cynlinfin@hotmail.com
Amanda Maddock (2005)
Simone Marean (2004)
Jeff Marshall (2002)
Mary Mazziotti (2001, Visual Art/Mixed Media)
Mary M. Mazziotti is a visual artist whose installation work focuses on our responses to death, remembrance and loss of identity. She exhibits internationally and is self-taught as an artist. She lives with her husband, architect Keith Cochran, in Pittsburgh, PA.
Email: mazziotti@mindspring.com
Corinne Melchior (2001)
Molly Melloan (2004 and 2005)
Gretchen Jane Mentzer (2006)
Gretchen Jane Mentzer is a sculptor and installation artist whose work engages landscape and environments, both natural and constructed. Her work has been exhibited at The Bolinas Museum and the Koahsiung Museum of Fine Arts in Taiwan. She lives in Mill Valley, California.
Teriz Michael (2002)
Stacy Mohammed (2003)
Elizabeth Molnar (2002)
Mary Jane Montalto (2005, Painting/Digital/Video/Film/Sculpture)
MJ Montalto has shown throughout the New York City area, including the museums of Newark, Trenton and Jersey City, Parsons School of Design, PS122 Gallery, AIR Gallery, and ClampArt Gallery in NYC. She received a Pollock Krasner Foundation Grant for sculpture and has been a member of the studio arts organization of PS122 in NYC since 1996.
Brian Mooney (2001 and 2002, Writing)
Brian Mooney was born in Housatonic, MA, and has lived in Seattle, New York, and Vermont. He has published stories, poems, and essays in many literary magazines, and he’s taught writing at the University of Massachusetts and Marlboro College. He is senior faculty member of the Putney School Summer Program, and he bats lead-off for the Putney Fossils in the Connecticut River Valley Baseball League.
Email: brianm@marlboro.edu
Tracie Morris (2002)
Leah Mutz (2004 and 2005)
James Najarian (2003)
James Najarian is an associate professor of english at Boston College specializing in Romantic and Victorian Poetry and nonfiction prose. His interests include gender and sexuality in literature, poetic influence, religion in literature, and book production. He is the author of Victorian Keats: Manliness, Sexuality, and Desire (Palgrave Macmillan, 2002).
Nina Nastasia (2004)
Liz Nofziger (2003)
Liz Nofziger is a Boston-based installation artist who received her MFA from the Studio for Interrelated Media department at Massachusetts College of Art. Her work has been shown internationally, at venues including CVB Space (NYC), Kult 41 (Bonn, Germany), Judi Rotenberg Gallery (Boston, MA), the Cheekwood Museum of Art (Nashville, TN), Montserrat College of Art (Beverly, MA), the Sante Fe Art Institute (Sante Fe, NM), and at the Contemporary Artists Center (North Adams, MA). She has been honored by a number of awards, including the Massachusetts Cultural Council Sculpture Grant and the St. Botolph Club Artist Grant.
Sue O’Donnell (2006)
Sue O’Donnell is a visual artist whose work combines experimental book arts, graphic design, and conceptual narratives. She is the recipient of numerous artist residencies, grants, and awards, and has exhibited in New York, Ohio, Connecticut, and Louisiana. She currently lives and works in Hammond, Louisiana.
Emanuela Palazzi (2003)
Tina Pamintaun (2003)
Ishle Yi Park (2005, Poetry/Performance Poetry)
Ishle Yi Park is the Poet Laureate of Queens, NY. Her work has been published in over 30 anthologies, including The Best American Poetry of 2003 and The Beacon Best of 2001. Her first book, The Temperature of this Water, is the winner of the Pen America Beyond Margins Award 2005. Ishle has performed at over 300 venues nationally and internationally.
Email: ishlepark@gmail.com
Web: www.ishle.com
Lynn Pauley (2001)
Peg Peoples (2003)
Pheobe Bess Potts (2002)
Kathy Price (2001, Literature)
Kathy Price is a published poet and author of the award-winning picture book, The Bourbon Street Musicians. She is also a recipient of a 2005 New York Foundation of the Arts Fellowship in Poetry. Kathy is the editor of the downtown literary arts magazine…Issue 11 of A Gathering of the Tribes magazine, featuring musician Eliot Sharp, dancer Bill T. Jones, Academy Award winning filmmaker Mary Ann Deleo, artist Faith Ringgold, jazz violinist Regina Carter, and especially noted by Toni Morrison as a “beautiful issue.”
Web: www.kathyzprice.com
Helen Quinn (2005)
Eva Räder (2006)
Eva Räder is a German born painter who studied at the Universität der Künste in Berlin and has exhibited throughout Europe. She is currently a De Ateliers Fellow in Amsterdam.
Jane Ratcliffe (2001)
Lisa Resiman (2002)
Dan Restivo (2004, Musician/Actor/Director)
Dan Restivo was raised in the Green Mountains of southern Vermont where he first began to develop his passion for the performing arts. Trained in music and theatre at the University of Toronto, Marlboro College, The Eastman School, NYU, and the Del´ Arte School, Restivo has performed as a musician internationally and intermittently engages in experimental theatre projects with companies such as Canada’s “Panoply”, Ireland’s “G’wan So!” and Vermont’s “Company of Strangers”. Dan has recently returned to Vermont to work with local troupe “Luminzcircus” for the 2006 Summer season.
Email: danrestivo@gmail.com
Jodi Reyes (2002)
Sharifa Rhodes-Pitts (2004)
Sharifa is one of six recipients of the 2006 Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Awards, which are given annually to women writers who demonstrate excellence and promise in the early stages of their careers. The awards of $15,000 were presented to the six recipients in New York City on September 14th.
Yolanda Rivera (2002)
Ikuko Roth (2001)
Richard Roth (2001)
Leah Ryan (2005)
Leah Ryan is a playwright and fiction writer. She graduated from the Iowa Playwrights Workshop and The Juilliard Playwrights Program. She’s fiction editor at Punk Planet magazine and edited an anthology called For Here or To Go - Life in the Service Industry, published by Garrett County Press.
Email: Leah_ryan9@earthlink.net
Web: www.gcpress.com, www.punkplanet.com, and www.katerigg.com/html/nasian.html
Lynda Gene Rymond (2004 and 2005)
Web: www.goblinfarm.net
Anne Sanow (2006)
Anne Sanow’s fiction has been published in Shenandoah, Other Voices, and Shankpainter. She has received two Pushcart nominations and has twice been a finalist for the Katherine Anne Porter Prize for Fiction. She lives in Cambridge, MA.
Jeff Seabaugh (2002)
Caglayan Servincer (2004 and 2005)
Jaye Schlesinger (2005, Pastel/Watercolor/Charcoal/Graphite/Gouache)
I received an MFA in Painting as well as an MFA in Medical Illustration from the University of Michigan. I draw on my experience as a medical illustrator as well as my previous work as a woodworker in my current work, which involves tools as the subject matter. I portray an object or a group of objects in a way that allows them to become symbolic, metaphorical, or provocative in some way. I won a 2nd place award in the “Pastel National 2006″ at the Wichita Center for the Arts, in May 2006. I am now being represented by the Gallery Henoch, 555 W. 25th St, New York, NY. So, next time you’re in NY, stop by the gallery and take a peek at some of my work. AND, more importantly, please feel free to pass this info along to anyone you think might be a potential art buyer.
Email: jayes@umich.edu
Web: www.jayeschlesinger.com
Tom Shaner (2004 and 2005)
Kae Sharpe (2004)
Amy Sickels (2002 and 2003, Writer)
Amy Sickels is a writer living in Brooklyn, NY. Her stories have been published in the Greensboro Review, The Madison Review, and Natural Bridge. She has been to the Hall Farm Center Residency, The MacDowell Residency, and Djerassi Residency.
Jennifer Simms (2004)
Craig Skelton (2002)
Jodi Smith (2002)
Walter Benjamin Smith (2006)
Walter Benjamin Smith makes paintings that depict manifestations of the ancient and universal mystic consciousness in the context of the digital age. Smith has participated in three shows in NYC this year and a solo exhibition in Philadelphia.
Forrest Snyder (2001, Ceramics/Sculpture/Photography)
Forrest Snyder is a professional artist, writer, and computer geek practicing his arts in North Bennington, VT.
Email: forrest@forrestsnyder.com
Web: www.forrestsnyder.com and www.criticalceramics.com
Patricia Sonntag (2002)
Erin Soros (2005)
Jared Stanley (2003, Poetry)
Jared Stanley lives and works in Northern California, and edits the poetry journal Mrs. Maybe. There’s a chapbook Measuring Daylight With a Stick and poems are forthcoming in Conduit, Gutcult, and Mustachioed.
Erin Stellmon (2001 and 2003)
Erin is originally from Portland, Oregon where she learned to make art and play catch. She took those skills to NYC in the early nineties where she won many friends and influenced few. Currently she is armwrestling and drinking whiskey in Las Vegas while finishing her MFA at UNLV.
Web: www.erinstellmon.com
Brooke Stephens (2001)
Leigh Tarentino (2004)
Susan Thames (2002)
Lisa Titus (2002)
Barbara Tran (2006)
Barbara Tran is the author of In the Mynah Bird’s Own Words, and is the recipient of a Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference scholarship and Lannan Foundation Writing Residency. Her poems have appeared in Pushcart Prize XXIII and The New Yorker. She lives in Pownal, Vermont.
Monique Truong (2006)
Monique Truong was born in Saigon and currently lives in New York. Her first novel, The Book of Salt, won an Asian American Literary Award and the PEN/Oakland-Joshephine Miles National Literary Award, among others. She lives in Brooklyn.
Jay Van Buren (2003)
Genevieve Villamora (2003)
David Vining (2002 and 2003)
Jasmine Dreame Wagner (2006)
Website: www.songsaboutghosts.com
Jasmine Dreame Wagner’s writing has appeared in the Colorado Review, Indiana Review, The Seattle Review, The North American Review, The Columbia Review, elimae and is forthcoming in 32 Poems, La Petite Zine and Kulture Vulture. A graduate of Columbia University, she is currently an MFA candidate at the University of Montana-Missoula where she performs in the experimental-folk and art collective Cabinet of Natural Curiosities. For more information on her illustration, collage and soundwork, visit www.cabinetofnaturalcuriosities.com.
Anastasia Ward (2005)
Anastasia Ward moved to Minneapolis in 2000 after graduating from Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado. As a Minneapolis emerging artist she is establishing herself with national exhibits in Vermont, New Hampshire, Illinois, Wisconsin, North Carolina, Colorado, and Minnesota. She is a member of a gallery collective called Rosalux, next to downtown Minneapolis. Her most recent group shows include the Stevens Square Center for the Arts, Minnesota, the Galesburg Center for Arts and Education, Illinois, and the SOO Visual Arts Center, Minnesota. She also has a large-scale outdoor sculpture on permanent display in West Point Sculpture Park, St. Paul, Minnesota. This summer she is assisting kinetic workshops with the Science Museum of St. Paul, and working with the Kulture Klub Collaborative on an Artist in Residence program teaching kids how to make kinetic toy sculptures from scratch.
Richard Webster (2005, Fiction Writer)
Richard A. Webster teaches humanities at the renowned International High School in New York City. He resides in New Jersey with his wife, Elizabeth, and his two children.
Email: runcinate@aol.com
Timothy Westmoreland (2004)
Timothy Westmoreland, a native Texan, received his B.A. degree from UT Arlington and an M.F.A. from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Westmoreland has been an Assistant Professor of Fiction Writing at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, but has also taught creative writing at Amherst College and Hampshire College. His first book, Good As Any (Harcourt Brace, 2002) is a collection of short stories that was widely reviewed and recommended as the work of a promising young writer. He was featured in Book Magazine’s article “Writers You Need to Know.” Amazon.com selected Good as Any for top-five list of 2002 Best Books of Fiction by New Authors. Westmoreland was also a guest on NPR’s international program Studio 360 and has also appeared on Voice of America radio. Westmoreland has already begun Gathering, a novel set “in spare and punishing Texas landscapes.” The novel will explore the effects of serious illness - in this case diabetes - on its young character’s life.
Michelle Suzanne Wildgen (2002, Writing/Fiction/Non-Fiction)
Michelle Wildgen is senior editor of Tin House magazine and an editor at Tin House books. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in various publications, including Best New American Voices 2004, Best Food Writing 2004, the anthology A Memorable Feast, Tri Quarterly, Story Quarterly, Gulf Coast, and Prairie Schooner, which awarded her the 2005 Virginia Faulkner prize. Her novel, You’re Not You, will be published next June by St. Martin’s Press.
Email: michelle@tinhouse.com
Sanford Wintersberger (2006)
Sanford Wintersberger is an American born multi-media artist who, after studying at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, has spent the last ten years living and working in France. His work has been shown in Europe and the United States.
Barbara Whitney (2004 and 2005)
Jared Williams (2003)
Lena Wolff (2003)
Penny Wolfson (2003)
Penny Wolfson is the recipient of a National Magazine Award in 2002 for her essay Moonrise, which was also included in Best American Essays, and published a memoir of the same name in 2003. Her work has appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and in literary reviews. Her latest essay, “Double Lives, or the Meaning of Bigamy,” was recently published in Chelsea.
Katrina Wong (2003)
Alice Wu (2005)
Alice Wu is the writer and director of Saving Face (2004).
