EXECUTIVE EDITOR
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Rockcastle grew up in Plainfield, New Jersey, and received her B.A. from Douglass College (Rutgers University). She moved to Minnesota in 1974 to do a Ph.D. in English but halfway through decided to focus on creative writing instead. She finished her M.A. with a double emphasis in English and creative writing in 1980. She taught in the creative writing program at the University of Minnesota for four years before joining the MALS faculty at Hamline in 1991. In 1997 she founded Water~Stone Review, a national literary review published by GLS. The Review has won a Pushcart Prize, a bronze award for design excellence from the Minnesota Magazine Publishers Association, and an award from Best American Poetry 2002. In 1999 she received a Distinguished Teaching and Service Award from the Graduate School of Liberal Studies. Mary François Rockcastle is married to Garth Rockcastle, Dean of the School of Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Historic Preservation at the University of Maryland. They are exploring life as a commuting couple. They have two daughters, Maura and Siobhan. |
CREATIVE NONFICTION EDITOR
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Barrie Jean Borich is the author of My Lesbian Husband: Landscapes of a Marriage (Graywolf), winner of an American Library Association GLBT Nonfiction Book Award and finalist for the Minnesota Book and Lambda Literary awards. Her first book, Restoring the Color of Roses (Firebrand) is a memoir set in the Calumet region of Chicago, where she grew up. Her essay "On a Clear Day, Catalina" recently won the Crab Orchard Review John Guyin Literary Nonfiction Prize, and she has essays forthcoming in Crab Orchard Review, Ecotone, Hotel Amerika, New Ohio Review and Seattle Review. Her work has been anthologized in Riding Shotgun; Women Writers Write about Their Mothers, has been listed as a Notable Essay in Best American Essays and has received Special Mention in the annual Pushcart Prize Best of the Small Presses. Borich holds an MFA from the Rainier Writer's Workshop at Pacific Lutheran University and is the recipient of many literary prizes including a Bush Artist Fellowship, two Minnesota State Arts Board Fellowships, a Loft McKnight Award in Creative Prose, and a Loft Mentor Award in Poetry. She was one of two writers chosen by Rosellen Brown to receive a Loft McKnight Award of Distinction, and was among those chosen by both Scott Russell Sanders and Gloria Anzaldúa to receive Loft Creative Nonfiction Mentor Series Awards. |
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Currently she teaches in the MFA program at Hamline University where she is Poetry Editor for Water-Stone Review. She also has taught at Macalester College, the University of Texas (Extension), and San Francisco State University, and has conducted workshops and residencies at the Princeton Theological Seminary in addition to many schools, libraries, and associations. She received a Hamline Distinguished Teaching & Service Award and was a 2002 Shannon Institute for Community Leadership Fellow. Her interviews with notable poets, including Adrienne Rich, Brenda Hillman, Lucille Clifton, Li-Young Lee, Eavan Boland, and Sharon Olds, are published widely; in 2001 she interviewed W. S. Merwin onstage at the University of Minnesota. Her essay on Minnesota literature, "Where Dakota Drifts Wild in the Universe", appeared in a 1999 Hungry Mind Review issue. She has read and performed her work and work by other writers in Minneapolis (the Loft, Walker Art Center, Patrick's Cabaret), Saint Paul, San Francisco, Seattle, Iowa City, and Texas. As a founding member of the Minnesota Arts Alliance, she initiated creation of the "Silent Witness" figures commemorating women killed by domestic violence which were exhibited in the United States Senate and throughout the country. |
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A graduate of the Iowa Writers Workshop, Sheila O’Connor has been awarded two Bush Fellowships, a Minnesota State Arts Board Fellowship, and a Loft McKnight Fellowship. She has also received the award for outstanding teaching and service in the MFA/MALS program at Hamline University. In addition to her work as an assistant professor and faculty advisor at Hamline, Sheila O’Connor has worked extensively with educators and young people as a Writer-in-the-Schools. An active advocate for arts education, Sheila O’Connor has developed writing curriculum for students of all ages. She has also created writing programs for art museums. She is the editor of two collections of writing by young people Come Home Before Dark and In My Hand Forever. She has taught at the University of Minnesota, the Split Rock Arts Program, and the Loft Literary Center. |
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Maloney-Vinz hails from Lake Mills, Wisconsin, a small town near Madison. She received her B.A. from the University of St. Thomas and taught high school English for eight years at St. Paul Central before leaving the profession to pursue her MFA in poetry. Her poetry manuscript, World, was one of the finalists for consideration of Outstanding Thesis in its genre for 2007. She lives in St. Paul, MN with her partner, Lisa and their daughter, Maeve.
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