Portrait of My Father as a Cartoon Robber

Ross White is the director of Bull City Press, an independent publisher of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction. The author of two chapbooks, How We Came Upon the Colony (Unicorn Press, 2014) and The Polite Society (Unicorn Press, 2017), he teaches creative writing at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, New England Review, Poetry Daily, Tin House, and The Southern Review, among others. He is the poetry editor of Four Way Review. Follow him on Twitter: @rosswhite.
Lost in Parallax

Logo and spouse live in the upper Midwest with their puckish quadruped. He has worked with patients, students and those enduring homelessness. Logo writes (and bakes and bikes) as solacing means of existence. Logo’s poetry has appeared or will appear in The Notre Dame Review, Pedestal Magazine, Parhelion, AZURE, and others.
Guada Mabuya

Born in San Juan, Puerto Rico, raised in Essex County, New Jersey, Poetry Reader for Muzzle Magazine, and current recipient of the Atlantis Award for Poetry, Julio Cesar Villegas is the writer that your abuelos warned you about. His scriptures can be found or are forthcoming in PANK, Rigorous Mag, Subprimal Poetry Art, Bridge Eight, Into The Void, Waccamaw, Bare Fiction, as well as the inescapable mouth of the abyss. Puerto Rico Se Levanta. Follow Julio’s tweets from the abyss at @VforVillegas.
Museums of Natural Histories (1)

Beth Marzoni’s poems have recently appeared in Cimarron Review, Hayden’s Ferry Review,and American Literary Review among others. She co-edits Pilot Light, a journal of contemporary poetics and criticism, and she teaches literature and writing at Viterbo University in La Crosse, Wisconsin.
receding monologue

Mackenzie Kozak is a poet living in Asheville, North Carolina. She holds an MFA from UNC-Greensboro, where she served as Poetry Editor of The Greensboro Review. Currently, she is an Associate Editor at Orison Books and Asheville Poetry Review. Her manuscript in place of a mouth & far flung was a finalist for the 2018 National Poetry Series. Mackenzie’s poetry appears in Boston Review, Denver Quarterly, jubilat, Sixth Finch, THRUSH Poetry Journal, and elsewhere. Find her online at mackenziekozak.com
Reading Is Fundamental

Hailing from the farm valleys of west Appalachia, Ben Kline lives in Cincinnati, Ohio, toiling away on his full-length manuscript Twang while drinking just the right amount of bourbon, but more coffee than seems wise. His work is forthcoming or has recently appeared in Rappahannock Review, Toe Good, Riggwelter, The Mantle, Ghost City Review, apt, ImageOutWrite Vol. 7, The Offing, Impossible Archetype, Ink & Nebula, The Matador Review and many more.
Slash on a Bicycle

W. Todd Kaneko is the author of The Dead Wrestler Elegies (Curbside Splendor, 2014) and This Is How the Bone Sings (Black Lawrence Press, 2020), and co-author of Poetry: A Writer’s Guide and Anthology (Bloomsbury Academic, 2018). A Kundiman fellow, he is co-editor of Waxwing magazine and lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan where he teaches at Grand Valley State University.
Amorak Huey is author of the poetry collections Boom Box (Sundress, 2019), Seducing the Asparagus Queen (Cloudbank, 2018), and Ha Ha Ha Thump (Sundress, 2015), as well as two chapbooks. He is co-author of the textbook Poetry: A Writer’s Guide and Anthology (Bloomsbury, 2018) and teaches writing at Grand Valley State University in Michigan.
Quaking Aspen, or dendrophilia

Matty Layne Glasgow is the author of the poetry collection, deciduous qween, selected by Richard Blanco as the winner of the Benjamin Saltman Award and forthcoming from Red Hen Press in June 2019. His recent poems appear in or are forthcoming from the Missouri Review, Crazyhorse, Denver Quarterly, Poetry Daily, Collagist, BOAAT, Puerto del Sol,Nimrod, and elsewhere. Matty received his MFA in Creative Writing & Environment from Iowa State University and currently lives in Houston, Texas where he teaches with Writers in the Schools.
The Hundredth Anniversary

Leah Falk’s poems and essays have appeared in The Kenyon Review, FIELD, Thrush, Los Angeles Review of Books, and elsewhere. She’s received support for her writing from the Yiddish Book Center, the Vermont Studio Center, Asylum Arts, and the Helen Zell Writers Program at the University of Michigan. She lives in Philadelphia and runs programming at the Writers House at Rutgers University-Camden.
In My Brother’s House

Cydnee Devereaux is a writer from Florida. Her poetry has been supported by the Bread Loaf Writers Conference and the Sewanee Writers Conference. She is the Robert Penn Warren Fellow at Vanderbilt University, where she received her MFA in Poetry.