
April
2
John Olivares Espinoza |

Bilingual Review Press |

April
9
Charles Jensen |
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John Olivares
Espinoza was born in Indio, Calif., in 1978 and derives his
poetic inspiration through his days working as a gardener with his
family. He holds degrees in creative writing from the University of
California at Riverside and Arizona State University, where he was a
Paul and Daisy Soros New American Fellow. He has published two
chapbooks, Aluminum Times (Davis: Swan Scythe Press, 2002)
and Gardeners of Eden (Berkeley: Chicano Chapbook Series,
2000). His full-length collection of poetry, The Date Fruit
Elegies, is forthcoming from Bilingual Review Press. He teaches
English literature at the National Hispanic University in San Jose,
Calif.
Presented as part of
Arte es Amor, an annual celebration
of Latino arts and culture throughout Tempe and ASU. |
Bilingual Review
Press publishes literary works, scholarship and art books by
or about United States Hispanics under the name Bilingual
Press/Editorial Bilingüe. It also produces the literary/scholarly
journal Bilingual Review, distribute more than 1,000
titles by other presses and is the exclusive distributor of books by
Latin American Literary Review Press.
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Charles Jensen is the assistant director of the Virginia G.
Piper Center for Creative Writing at Arizona State University. He is
the author of three chapbooks, including Living Things and
The Strange Case of Maribel Dixon. In 2007 he received an
Artist’s Project Grant from the Arizona Commission on the Arts. His
poetry has appeared in Bloom, The Journal, New England Review,
spork and West Branch. He is the founding editor of the
online poetry magazine LOCUSPOINT, which explores creative
work on a city-by-city basis. |

April
16
Hershman John |

April 23
Patricia Colleen Murphy |

April 30
James Sallis |
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Hershman John is both a poet
and a short fiction writer. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree
in English and his Masters of Fine Arts in Creative Writing, both
from Arizona State University. He is a full-time faculty member at
Phoenix College. His works have been widely published: Arizona
Highways, Flyway-A Literary Review, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Journal
of Navajo Education, Puerto del Sol,
Wicazo Sa Review, O Taste and See: Food Poems, Family
Matters: Poems of our Families … .
The University of Arizona
Press published his first collection of poems entitled, I Swallow
Turquoise for Courage. |
Patricia Coleen Murphy
earned a Bachelor of Arts
degree in English and French from Miami University and a Masters of
Fine Arts in Poetry from Arizona State University. Her poems have
appeared in more than 20 literary journals, including The Iowa
Review, Quarterly West and American Poetry Review.
Her poems have received awards from the Associated Writers and
Writing Programs and the Academy of American Poets, Glimmer Train
Press and The Southern California Review. Her manuscript
Inevitable Flow has been a finalist at Carnegie Mellon Press
and Alice James Books. |
James Sallis
has
published books of poetry, 14 novels, the definitive biography of
Chester Himes, a translation of Raymond Queneau's novel Saint
Glinglin and multiple volumes of short stories, essays and
musicology. His novel Drive is in pre-production with
Universal Studios; the six Lew Griffin novels are in development. Sallis
teaches at Phoenix College, is on the faculty at Otis College in Los
Angeles and, in his spare time, plays guitar, banjo, Dobro and
mandolin with Three-Legged Dog, a trio of multi-instrumentalists
playing oldtime, bluegrass, gospel, blues and vintage country. He
received a lifetime achievement award from Bouchercon, the
international mystery convention, in October of 2006. |
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