William L. Spencer

William L. Spencer has published fiction and non-fiction in the San Diego Reader and West Coast Review (Simon Fraser University). His short story “In the System” was published online by Uprising Review in 2017 (pen name Carlos Dunning). Short story “What I Done” is in the Spring 2018 issue of Furtive Dalliance Literary Review available on Amazon, and a piece of experimental fiction “The Bastard Died On Me” is online at SoftCartel.com. Two stories were published in The Magnolia Review Volume 4, Issue 2. Spencer can be found on Scribophile.com as “Carlos Dunning” and an author interview is at:

https://verysherryterry.wordpress.com/2018/04/02/author-interview-william-l-spencer/

Schoolboy and That Which More Often Than Not is Left Unsaid, Volume 4, Issue 2
Interview
Crossing Copper River, Volume 5, Issue 1

Steven B. Rosenfeld

Steven B. Rosenfeld is a retired New York lawyer who has been writing for 40 years and began writing short fiction in 2015. His stories have been published in The City Key, Inigo Online, Jewish Fiction.net, Reflex Fiction, Good Works Review, and Flatbush Review. An earlier version of “Amy’s Story,” the piece published by Jewish Fiction.net in September 2017, received an Honorable Mention in the 2016 Short Story America Prize contest.

Risky, Volume 4, Issue 2

Interview

TJ Neathery

Though the two places don’t often go hand in hand, TJ Neathery spent his childhood between Texas and Albania. He writes fiction and received his MFA from Oregon State University. Among his recent publications are stories in Front Porch Review and Amarillo Bay. He also writes a weekly Artist of the Week feature for oncoloradosprings.com. Currently, he writes in Colorado Springs, CO and works in nonprofit communications. Check out his website: www.tjneathery.com/author.

Ravi S. and the Tiger, Volume 4, Issue 2

Paul Mills

Paul Mills has worked variously as an English teacher and newspaper subeditor in various countries including Spain, Lebanon, and China, but is currently based in the UK. His writing has appeared in The FT Magazine, The Lebanese Daily Star, and The Independent.

Slow fade, Volume 4, Issue 2

Jennifer Davis Michael

Jennifer Davis Michael is professor and chair of English at the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee, specializing in British Romanticism. Her poems have appeared in 3 Elements Review, Switchgrass Review, Cumberland River Review, Literary Mama, and Mezzo Cammin. She has also published a book of criticism, Blake and the City (Bucknell, 2006).

Remembering How to Build a Fire and Brush Fire, Roadside, North Alabama, Volume 4, Issue 2

Megan Miazgowicz

Megan Miazgowicz is a digital artist and illustrator, who recently graduated from Bowling Green State University with a BFA in Digital Art. Megan enjoys both digital painting and creating comics, and hopes to someday publish her own graphic novels. She is currently developing a comic series with her best friend and hopes to begin work on it this fall. Outside of comics, she enjoys reading, writing, character design, sleeping, and hanging out with her dog.

A Boat, Volume 4, Issue 2
Interview

Claire Martin

Claire Martin graduated from Columbia College Chicago in 2017, where she was a managing editor for the award winning literary magazine Hair Trigger, as well as the interview editor for its online counterpart, Hair Trigger 2.0. You can find her current fiction in Hair Trigger 40, Longshot Island, Ariel Chart, and in this summer’s upcoming issue release of Scarlet Leaf Review. These days, you can find her holed up with a camera somewhere along Lake Michigan.

The Hunter and the Home, Volume 4, Issue 2

Matthew J. Kreglow

Matthew J. Kreglow is a 2013 graduate of Bowling Green State University’s Creative Writing Program. Currently, he resides in his hometown of Medina, Ohio. In addition to writing poetry and short fiction, Matthew enjoys hiking the local nature trails and photographing wildlife and nature, as well as playing music with the local community band.

Fatal Error, Volume 4, Issue 2

Gloria DeVidas Kirchheimer

Gloria DeVidas Kirchheimer is the author of a novel, Amalie in Orbit, and a short story collection, Goodbye, Evil Eye. Her work has been published in various magazines, including The Antioch Review, Arts & Letters, Kansas Quarterly, Lilith, New Letters, Carolina Quarterly, North American Review, Persimmon Tree, Hippocampus and others. Check out her website: http://www.gkirchheimer.com/

I Could Bake a Cherry Pie, Volume 4, Issue 2

Lonnie James

Lonnie James attends BGSU for Film Production with a minor in Theater. James has been playing guitar for 17 years, and he is a touring musician. He now has a solo acoustic act under the stage name of Lonnie James, and he is currently in the process of writing the next screenplay and start filming over the summer. James’s film Temptation showed at the annual Ray Browne Film Festival, and the BGSU Film and Media Film Festival, and soon to be showing at the Glass City Film Festival on May 17th. His screenplay was chosen to be read at a live reading on October 2nd in the Donnell Theater at BGSU. James plans to make two films over the summer and graduate from BGSU next Spring.

The Depths of Darkness, Volume 4, Issue 2