Spring Annual 2022: Masthead

Editor
Zebulon Huset is a writer, photographer and teacher. He received his MFA from the University of Washington, won the Gulf Stream 2020 Summer Poetry Contest and his writing has appeared (or is forthcoming) in Best New Poets, The Southern Review, Fence, Atlanta Review, Rattle, Fjords, North American Review and Meridian among many others. He writes about writing and posts writing prompts at Notebooking Daily, and edits the ‘prompt themed’ monthly journal Sparked.

Assistant Fiction Editor
George Kowalik is a PhD candidate in the English department at King’s College London, working on contemporary Anglo-American fiction and specifically the distinction between ‘postmodernism’ and ‘post-postmodernism.’ He is also a freelance arts writer and published short fiction writer. His recent publications include The First Line, Lotus-eater, Luma Quarterly, Off Screen, and Sweet Tree Review. He was also shortlisted for Ouen Press’ 2019 Short Story Competition; his work appears in their print collection ‘Zawadi & Other Short Stories’ (2020, ed. P. Comley).

Assistant Poetry Editor
Carson Pytell is a writer whose work has appeared widely in such venues as Adirondack Review, Sheila-Na-Gig and The Heartland Review. His latest chapbooks; Tomorrow Everyday, Yesterday Too (Anxiety Press, 2022), and A Little Smaller Than the Final Quark (Bullshit Lit, 2022), are forthcoming.  

Utility All-Star
Jessica Tyson received her MFA from the University of Washington. Her poetry has been published in or is forthcoming from Redivider, Sidereal Magazine, RipRap, Apeiron Review, Crab Creek Review and The Acorn Review.

Fiction Reader
Francois Bereaud is a husband, dad, community college math professor, mentor in the Congolese refugee community, mountain biker, and mediocre hockey player. Recently he has been published online at Rejected Manuscripts, Sundial Magazine, The Write Launch, The Dillydoun Review, Roi Fainéant Press, and in print at Blood & Bourbon, Kind Writers, and ABQ InPrint. He earned a Pushcart nomination for his essay in The Twin Bill. He has written a novel and two short story collections which he dreams of publishing and seeing in the window of his beloved neighborhood bookstore.

Poetry Reader
Callie S. Blackstone writes both poetry and prose. Her work appears or is forthcoming in Plainsongs, Lily Poetry Review, Rust+Moth, Prime Number Magazine, West Trestle Review, and others. Callie is a lifelong New Englander. She is lucky enough to wake up to the smell of saltwater and the call of seagulls everyday. You can find her online home at www.calliesblackstone.com.

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