Contributors
Anaheed Alani is a freelance writer, researcher, and editor.
Nick Antosca is the author of Fires and Midnight Picnic. His writing has also appeared in The Barcelona Review, Nerve, Identity Theory, The New York Tyrant, Opium, and elimae.
Allan Appel is a novelist and journalist. He is the author of The Midland Kid: Tales of the Presidential Ghostwriter. He lives in New Haven.
Debby Applegate is the author of The Most Famous Man in America, which won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for biography. She hails from New Haven, CT.
Christopher Arnott is the former managing editor of the New Haven Advocate.
Samuel Astrachan, an angry young man of Jewish letters in the 1950s, lives in France.
Deirdre Bair won the National Book Award for her biography of Samuel Beckett. She lives in New Haven, CT.
Carole Bass is a longtime journalist. She lives in New Haven.
Paul Bass is the editor of the New Haven Independent. He lives in New Haven.
Carlene Bauer has written for Salon, The New York Times, and n+1.
Dawn Biehler teaches in the Department of Geography and Environmental Systems at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
Chloe Bland is a writer. She lives in Branford, CT.
Amy Bloom is the author of Away and other novels, collections of short stories, and essays. She lives in Durham, CT.
Matthew Cheney is an editor, writer, blogger, and English teacher.
Paul Clemens is the author of Made in Detroit.
Nicholas Day is a freelance writer. He lives in New Haven.
Nathan Day is a high school English teacher at César Chávez Public Charter Schools for Public Policy, Parkside Campus in Washington, DC.
Rudolph Delson is the author of Maynard & Jennica. He lives in Brooklyn, NY.
Ross Douthat is a senior editor for The Atlantic. He grew up in New Haven.
Elizabeth Edelglass is an award-winning short-story writer and the library director for the Department of Jewish Education of Greater New Haven. She lives in Woodbridge, CT.
Peter Ephross’s articles and reviews have appeared in the Village Voice, The Forward, and Publishers Weekly, among other publications.
Gregory Feeley is the author of Arabian Wine and other books. He lives in Hamden, CT.
Jonathan Fink is assistant professor of writing at the University of West Florida.
Dan Friedman is an associate editor of Zeek: A Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture.
Ian Ganassi’s poetry has appeared in numerous literary magazines, including The Paris Review, The Yale Review, and Verse. He lives in New Haven.
Eva Geertz is a bookseller. She lives in New Haven.
Tom Gogola, a member of the New Haven Review editorial commune, lives in New Haven.
Jakob Holder is a playwright who splits his time between Staten Island in New York and Ristisaari Island in Finland.
Joy Ladin is David and Ruth Gottesman Professor of English at Stern College of Yeshiva University.
Georgia Levenson Keohane is a writer and consultant in the fields of social policy, philanthropy, and non-profit management. She lives in New York City.
Jonathan Kiefer is arts editor at the Sacramento News & Review.
Jim Knipfel is a journalist and the author of three memoirs (Slackjaw, Quitting the Nairobi Trio, and Ruining It for Everybody) and three novels (The Buzzing, Noogie’s Time to Shine, and Unplugging Philco).
Alice Mattison is the author of In Case We’re Separated: Connected Stories and several other books. She lives in New Haven.
Cameron McClure is a literary agent and amateur bike mechanic. She lives in New York City.
Emily Moore teaches English at Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan. Her poetry has appeared in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, and the Yale Review.
Jeremy Ravi Mumford teaches at the University of Michigan.
Rebecca Onion is a freelance writer and a graduate student in American Studies at the University of Texas at Austin.
Daniel Oppenheimer is writing a book about political turncoats. He lives in Austin, TX.
Mark Oppenheimer, a member of the New Haven Review editorial commune, lives in New Haven.
Stephen Ornes is a science writer, a frequent contributor to Discover, and the author of the young-adult biography Sophie Germain. He lives in New Haven.
Greg Pierce is a playwright and fiction writer.
Chandra Prasad is the author of On Borrowed Wings and other books. She lives in Hamden, CT.
Desirea Rodgers is a photographer and creative director for Love146, a New Haven–based international human rights organization. She lives in New Haven.
Jess Row is the author of The Train to Lo Wu, a collection of short stories; his fiction has appeared in The Atlantic, Granta, Witness, and American Short Fiction. He teaches at The College of New Jersey.
George Scialabba is a book critic and the author of Divided Mind. He lives in Cambridge, MA.
Bruce Shapiro is executive director of the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma. He lives in New Haven.
Brian Francis Slattery, a member of the New Haven Review editorial commune, lives in Hamden, CT.
Brian Sholis is editor of Artforum.com and coeditor of The Uncertain States of America Reader. He is based in Brooklyn, NY.
Lizzie Skurnick is a poet and executive online director of Girls’ Life magazine.
Jim Sleeper, a lecturer in political science at Yale University, lives in New Haven.
Willard Spiegelman is the Hughes Professor of English at Southern Methodist University in Dallas and editor-in-chief of The Southwest Review.
Margaret Spillane teaches nonfiction at Yale University. She lives in New Haven.
Steven Stoll is the author of The Great Delusion: A Mad Inventor, Death in the Tropics, and the Utopian Origins of Economic Growth. He lives in Woodbridge, CT.
Sarah Pemberton Strong is a poet and the author of Burning the Sea. She lives in New Haven.
Matthew Swanson is a freelance writer who makes books with his wife, illustrator Robbi Behr, in a barn in Chestertown, MD.
Louise Swinn is the editorial director of Sleepers.
Bruce Tulgan is the author of several books and the founder of RainmakerThinking. He hails from New Haven, CT.
Amy Weldon teaches English at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa.
George Witte’s second collection of poetry, Deniability, will be published in January 2009. His first, The Apparitioners, was published in 2005. He works as the editor in chief of St. Martin’s Press.
Molly Worthen is writing a book about the renaissance of the evangelical mind. She lives in New Haven.
Marc Wortman is the author of The Millionaires‘ Unit. He lives in New Haven.