Contributors
Wynn Ahn is a Korean American writer who loves everything from literary micros to SFF novels. They work as a prose editor at Cloudscent Journal and an associate editor at Cast of Wonders. When they’re not writing, they’re diving into rabbit holes, obsessing about zombie apocalypses, and stressing about deadlines.
Lis Anna-Langston, hailed as “an author with a genuine flair for originality” by Midwest Book Review and “a loveable, engaging, original voice” by Publishers Weekly, is the author of five novels. She studied literature and creative writing and graduated magna cum laude in 2023. Winner of the NYC Big Book Award, Independent Press Awards, and dozens of other book awards, she is a three-time Pushcart Prize nominee, with work published extensively in literary journals. Her photography has been published in a stack of literary journals, including the upcoming issue of the Brussels Review, and in 491 Magazine, Bedlam Publishing , Cactus Heart Press, and Chamber Four Literary Magazine. Her films have screened worldwide. You can find her in the wilds of South Carolina plucking stories out of thin air or virtually at: www.lisannalangston.com/ or on Insta @lis.anna.langston.
Ken Been’s poetry has been published or is forthcoming in numerous journals internationally. Recent placements include The Brussels Review, The Primer, LIT Magazine, Dunes Review, Kelp Journal, The Opiate, Nova Literary-Arts Magazine, and Aethlon. His work also can be found in many other publications in print or digital issues, including a previous edition of New Feathers Anthology. Additionally, he has contributed to anthologies including Remembering Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Remembering Gerald Stern. Prominent among his themes, language, devices, and subjects are senescence, the randomness of hitchhiking, engines (mechanical–not the ones that search . . .) and tennis. He is from Detroit.
Darwin Bell is a San Francisco–based photographer who specializes in urban street photography/abstracts. He was born in Seattle but considers San Francisco his home and muse and finds inspiration on every street of his chosen city. More of his work can be seen on his Instagram page: https://www.instagram.com/darwinbell/
Mary Bradford (she/her) is a PhD Candidate in comparative literature at Harvard University. When not researching and writing about nineteenth-century historical novels, she dabbles in textile arts and poetry.
Leslie Brown creates images collected from her iPhone photographs, family albums. The images are edited and reimagined using PhotoScape X software. Her work has appeared in The Closed Eye Open, Zoetic Press: NBR, Phoebe Literary Journal, Beyond Words, Burningword Literary Journal, ZO, Consequence.
Kimmy Chang is working toward her first chapbook. She is a Pushcart Prize–nominated poet whose work has appeared or is forthcoming in trampset, Scapegoat Review, LandLocked, and Muse-Pie Press. She studied poetry at Stanford and works as a computer vision engineer. Originally from McKinney, Texas, she enjoys spoiling her adorable pet fluffs.
Rita Rouvalis Chapman’s poetry has appeared most recently in I-70 Review, Nine Mile, and Figure 1. She lives and writes in St. Louis, Missouri.
Richard Collins is the abbot of the New Orleans Zen Temple and lives in Sewanee, Tennessee, where he directs Stone Nest Zen Dojo. His photograph of Devil's Churn, Oregon, graced the cover of Willows Wept Review (fall 2024). His books include No Fear Zen (2015), In Search of the Hermaphrodite (Tough Poets, 2024), and the forthcoming Stone Nest: Poems (Shanti Arts, 2025).
Stevie Cornell is a singer/songwriter and recent transplant to Sonoma County. He was a veteran of the early SF punk scene in the seventies and went on to form the popular Bay Area Americana band the Movie Stars, which morphed into the retro-country band Red Meat in the early nineties. After moving to rural Vermont to raise a family early in the century, he is back in California and launching a belated solo career. His website is at steviecornell.com.
Sarah Daly is an American writer whose fiction, poetry, and drama have appeared in fifty literary journals including The Molotov Cocktail, Bright Flash Literary Review, and Cardinal Sins.
Nadine Ellsworth-Moran lives in Georgia, where she works in full-time ministry while pursuing her love of writing. She hopes to continue listening closely and writing about the shared experience of life in these times, with particular interest in the joys and struggles of coming to understand the history, identity, faith, and culture of the modern South. Her poems have appeared in Valiant Scribe, Structo, Theophron, Rust + Moth, Thimble, Sonic Boom, Emrys, Kakalak, and The Wild Word, among others. She shares her home with her husband and five unrepentant cats.
Christian Emecheta is a writer, illustrator, and computer scientist. His fiction and poetry have appeared in many online publications and magazines such as Arts Lounge Magazine, WriteFluence Anthology, the ninth edition of the Chinua Achebe Poetry/Essay Anthology, Synchronized Chaos Online Journal, The Decolonial Passage, Mocking Owl Roost, and elsewhere. He writes songs when inspired by a tune or lyrics. Christian enjoys reading, watching movies, and getting lost in his imagination. He hopes to travel the world.
Nicola Geddes, originally from Scotland, is now based in the west of Ireland, where she works as a cellist and tutor. Her poetry has been published widely in journals and anthologies, and broadcast on radio and television both in Ireland and abroad. She has won or been shortlisted for several awards, most recently being in receipt of the poetry bursary from Crannóg magazine.
Mara Lee Grayson’s poetry has appeared in Poetry Northwest, Tampa Review, Nimrod, and other literary journals and has been nominated for the Best of the Net and Pushcart Prizes. Grayson is the author or editor of five books of nonfiction. She holds an MFA from The City College of New York and a PhD from Columbia University and previously worked as a tenured professor of English in the California State University system. Find her on social media @maraleegrayson.
Noll Griffin (he/him) is a visual artist, writer, and musician based in Berlin, Germany. His first chapbook, titled Tourist Info is available through Alien Buddha Press. You can find him on Tumblr/Twitter/Bluesky under @nollthere.
Chase Hart is a poet, professor, and competitive pinball player. He lives in Denver with his wife and their two cats.
Josh Humphrey was born and bred in Kearny, New Jersey. His career as a librarian, which is into its second decade, has been the source of much poetry in his life. Recently, his poems have been published in the Rutherford Red Wheelbarrow, Paterson Literary Review, US 1 Worksheets, Innisfree Poetry Journal, Streetlight, and Oberon. He has upcoming work in Southeast Review. He is a current nominee for a Pushcart Prize.
Gracie Jones is a writer, poet, and playwright who is studying creative writing at the University of Gloucestershire. She has had two poems, “Recipe for Approval” and “The Web of Your Love,” previously published in the university’s 2024 Unbreakable anthology. Gracie has also completed work experience at Treehouse Digital LTD, where she was able to work with professional filmmakers, allowing her to discover a love for storytelling. Her play, One Day You’ll Understand, was performed at a showcase at the Everyman Theatre in 2024.
Lizbeth Leigh Jones holds a degree in creative writing from the University of Arizona, where she received the Torrance Award for Outstanding Upperclassman in Creative Writing. Her recent poem “Apocalyptic Us” can be read in the current issue of Cagibi. Other works of short fiction and nonfiction have been published in Compendium, Persona, and Bainbridge Island Magazine. She currently lives in Atlanta, Georgia, where she works as a freelance writer, editor, and creativity coach. A description of services can be found on theliterarytherapist.com. She is a member of the Broadleaf Writers Association and the Editorial Freelance Association.
Tim Kahl is the author of six books of poems, most recently Omnishambles (Bald Trickster, 2019), California Sijo (Bald Trickster, 2022) and Drips, Spills, Bursts, Tangles, and Washes (Cold River Press, 2024). He is also an editor of Clade Song. He builds flutes, plays them, and plays guitars, ukuleles, charangos, and cavaquinhos, as well. He currently teaches at California State University, Sacramento, where he sings lieder while walking on campus between classes. Go to soundcloud.com/tnklbnny to hear his music.
Michael Moreth is a recovering Chicagoan living in the rural, micropolitan city of Sterling, the Paris of Northwest Illinois.
Hannah Page graduated from Columbia University in 2022 with an MFA in Creative Writing. She has been featured in Tupelo Quarterly, StreetLit, Half and One, Cathexis Northwest Press, and elsewhere. She is currently polishing her first full-length collection, To Unravel is Not Always to Fall Apart. She lives in Manhattan.
Sean Bw Parker (MA) is a writer, artist, and musician based in Worthing, West Sussex. He lived in Istanbul for ten years, has written or contributed to a number of books and albums, and has given a TED talk. He was born in Exeter in 1975.
Mary Paterson is a writer, artist, and curator based in London (UK). She writes mainly for performance, and her work has been presented around the world, including with Live Art DK (Copenhagen), Wellcome Collection (London) & Arnolfini (Bristol). Mary is the cofounder of Something Other, a platform for experimental writing and performance, which has been running since 2014. More recently turning to poetry, Mary’s poems have been published by Poetry Magazine, 3am Magazine, and Only Poem, amongst others.
Pamela Richardson is a writer and martial artist who lives in Charlotte, North Carolina, with her husband. She owns a Taekwondo studio, where she teaches children and adults martial arts. She has published in The Main Street Rag, Roi Fainéant, New Feathers Anthology, and Bulb Culture Collective, among others.
Carl Scharwath has appeared globally with 250+ publications selecting his writing or art. He has published four poetry books, and his latest book is The World Went Dark, published by Alien Buddha Press. He also has four photography books, published with Praxis and CreatiVingenuitiy. His photography was exhibited in the Mount Dora and Leesburg Centers for the Arts. Carl is currently an art editor at Glitterati and former editor for Minute Magazine. He was nominated with four Best of the Net Awards (2022–25) and two different 2023 Pushcart Nominations for poetry and a short story.
A. Michael Schultz is a writer and educator living in Northern Appalachia. His recent poetry appears or is forthcoming in Appalachian Journal, Willawaw Journal, The Collidescope, Poor Yorick, and elsewhere. He is assistant professor of English at Belmont College.
Dr. Ezra Harker Shaw (they/them) is a nonbinary writer from Scotland, now living in London. They are the author of the acclaimed literary novel The Aziola's Cry: A Novel of the Shelleys. They have written two plays, Tolstoy Tried to Kill My Partner and The Grouchy Octopus Story, and have been shortlisted for the Out-Spoken Prize for Poetry.
Ivanna Stepanova is a graduate of the Russian Academy of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture of Ilya Glazunov (Moscow), Faculty of Painting. She defended her diploma with honors in 2021 in the specialty “artist-painter.” She also graduated with honors from the academy’s assistantship-internship in the specialty “art of painting (easel painting).”
A member of the Union of Artists of Russia, she is a participant in numerous exhibitions of the union, as well as in exhibition projects in various Russian regions. She is also a participant in international exhibitions, including “Young Russian Culture in Italy” (2018), “Cultural Mission in Italy” (2021).
Samuel Totten is a novelist and short story writer. His first novel, All Eyes on the Sky, about life and death in the war-torn Nuba Mountains of Sudan, was published by African Studies Books in Kampala, Uganda. Recently, he has had short stories published and accepted by History Through Fiction, Frighten the Horses, both based in the United States and The Wise Owl in India.
Angela Townsend is a five-time Pushcart Prize nominee, seven-time Best of the Net nominee, and the 2024 winner of West Trade Review's 704 Prize for Flash Fiction. Her work appears or is forthcoming in Arts & Letters, Chautauqua, Epiphany, Five Points, Indiana Review, The Normal School, Pleiades, SmokeLong Quarterly, Terrain, and Under the Sun, among others. She graduated from Princeton Seminary and Vassar College.
Jonathan Chibuike Ukah is a Pushcart Prize–nominated poet from the UK. His poems have been featured in the Atticus Review, San Antonio Review, The Ephemeral Literary Review, Strange Horizons, The Pierian, The Unleash Lit, and elsewhere. He is the winner of the Alexander Pope Poetry Award 2023 and the second runner-up of the Wingless Dreamer Publishing Poetry Prize 2023.
Anna Ursyn, PhD, professor, University of Northern Colorado, has published twelve books and several book chapters. She has exhibited her work in over fifty single art shows/two hundred fine art exhibitions, including over a dozen times at the ACM SIGGRAPH Art Galleries and at the Louvre, Paris, NTT Museum in Tokyo (five thousand texts and two thousand images representing XX Century), and Virtual Media Network. Since 1987, she has been chair of the Symposium and Digital Art Gallery D-ART: International IEEE Conference on Information Visualisation (iV) London. Her artwork was selected to be sent to the Moon by NASA as a part of the MoonArk Project by Carnegie Mellon University. Her work has also appeared in traveling shows, including for Centre Pompidou, Paris. Her work in the ABAD exhibition is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. She also has work in the permanent collection of Museé de la Poste in Paris, France, and the Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC. To learn more, see her website at ursyn.com.
Kendra Whitfield lives and writes in Athabasca, Alberta, Canada. When not writing, she can be found swimming laps at the local pool or basking in sunbeams on her back deck. Her work has been anthologized by Community Building Art Works and Beyond the Veil Press.
Lis Anna-Langston, hailed as “an author with a genuine flair for originality” by Midwest Book Review and “a loveable, engaging, original voice” by Publishers Weekly, is the author of five novels. She studied literature and creative writing and graduated magna cum laude in 2023. Winner of the NYC Big Book Award, Independent Press Awards, and dozens of other book awards, she is a three-time Pushcart Prize nominee, with work published extensively in literary journals. Her photography has been published in a stack of literary journals, including the upcoming issue of the Brussels Review, and in 491 Magazine, Bedlam Publishing , Cactus Heart Press, and Chamber Four Literary Magazine. Her films have screened worldwide. You can find her in the wilds of South Carolina plucking stories out of thin air or virtually at: www.lisannalangston.com/ or on Insta @lis.anna.langston.
Ken Been’s poetry has been published or is forthcoming in numerous journals internationally. Recent placements include The Brussels Review, The Primer, LIT Magazine, Dunes Review, Kelp Journal, The Opiate, Nova Literary-Arts Magazine, and Aethlon. His work also can be found in many other publications in print or digital issues, including a previous edition of New Feathers Anthology. Additionally, he has contributed to anthologies including Remembering Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Remembering Gerald Stern. Prominent among his themes, language, devices, and subjects are senescence, the randomness of hitchhiking, engines (mechanical–not the ones that search . . .) and tennis. He is from Detroit.
Darwin Bell is a San Francisco–based photographer who specializes in urban street photography/abstracts. He was born in Seattle but considers San Francisco his home and muse and finds inspiration on every street of his chosen city. More of his work can be seen on his Instagram page: https://www.instagram.com/darwinbell/
Mary Bradford (she/her) is a PhD Candidate in comparative literature at Harvard University. When not researching and writing about nineteenth-century historical novels, she dabbles in textile arts and poetry.
Leslie Brown creates images collected from her iPhone photographs, family albums. The images are edited and reimagined using PhotoScape X software. Her work has appeared in The Closed Eye Open, Zoetic Press: NBR, Phoebe Literary Journal, Beyond Words, Burningword Literary Journal, ZO, Consequence.
Kimmy Chang is working toward her first chapbook. She is a Pushcart Prize–nominated poet whose work has appeared or is forthcoming in trampset, Scapegoat Review, LandLocked, and Muse-Pie Press. She studied poetry at Stanford and works as a computer vision engineer. Originally from McKinney, Texas, she enjoys spoiling her adorable pet fluffs.
Rita Rouvalis Chapman’s poetry has appeared most recently in I-70 Review, Nine Mile, and Figure 1. She lives and writes in St. Louis, Missouri.
Richard Collins is the abbot of the New Orleans Zen Temple and lives in Sewanee, Tennessee, where he directs Stone Nest Zen Dojo. His photograph of Devil's Churn, Oregon, graced the cover of Willows Wept Review (fall 2024). His books include No Fear Zen (2015), In Search of the Hermaphrodite (Tough Poets, 2024), and the forthcoming Stone Nest: Poems (Shanti Arts, 2025).
Stevie Cornell is a singer/songwriter and recent transplant to Sonoma County. He was a veteran of the early SF punk scene in the seventies and went on to form the popular Bay Area Americana band the Movie Stars, which morphed into the retro-country band Red Meat in the early nineties. After moving to rural Vermont to raise a family early in the century, he is back in California and launching a belated solo career. His website is at steviecornell.com.
Sarah Daly is an American writer whose fiction, poetry, and drama have appeared in fifty literary journals including The Molotov Cocktail, Bright Flash Literary Review, and Cardinal Sins.
Nadine Ellsworth-Moran lives in Georgia, where she works in full-time ministry while pursuing her love of writing. She hopes to continue listening closely and writing about the shared experience of life in these times, with particular interest in the joys and struggles of coming to understand the history, identity, faith, and culture of the modern South. Her poems have appeared in Valiant Scribe, Structo, Theophron, Rust + Moth, Thimble, Sonic Boom, Emrys, Kakalak, and The Wild Word, among others. She shares her home with her husband and five unrepentant cats.
Christian Emecheta is a writer, illustrator, and computer scientist. His fiction and poetry have appeared in many online publications and magazines such as Arts Lounge Magazine, WriteFluence Anthology, the ninth edition of the Chinua Achebe Poetry/Essay Anthology, Synchronized Chaos Online Journal, The Decolonial Passage, Mocking Owl Roost, and elsewhere. He writes songs when inspired by a tune or lyrics. Christian enjoys reading, watching movies, and getting lost in his imagination. He hopes to travel the world.
Nicola Geddes, originally from Scotland, is now based in the west of Ireland, where she works as a cellist and tutor. Her poetry has been published widely in journals and anthologies, and broadcast on radio and television both in Ireland and abroad. She has won or been shortlisted for several awards, most recently being in receipt of the poetry bursary from Crannóg magazine.
Mara Lee Grayson’s poetry has appeared in Poetry Northwest, Tampa Review, Nimrod, and other literary journals and has been nominated for the Best of the Net and Pushcart Prizes. Grayson is the author or editor of five books of nonfiction. She holds an MFA from The City College of New York and a PhD from Columbia University and previously worked as a tenured professor of English in the California State University system. Find her on social media @maraleegrayson.
Noll Griffin (he/him) is a visual artist, writer, and musician based in Berlin, Germany. His first chapbook, titled Tourist Info is available through Alien Buddha Press. You can find him on Tumblr/Twitter/Bluesky under @nollthere.
Chase Hart is a poet, professor, and competitive pinball player. He lives in Denver with his wife and their two cats.
Josh Humphrey was born and bred in Kearny, New Jersey. His career as a librarian, which is into its second decade, has been the source of much poetry in his life. Recently, his poems have been published in the Rutherford Red Wheelbarrow, Paterson Literary Review, US 1 Worksheets, Innisfree Poetry Journal, Streetlight, and Oberon. He has upcoming work in Southeast Review. He is a current nominee for a Pushcart Prize.
Gracie Jones is a writer, poet, and playwright who is studying creative writing at the University of Gloucestershire. She has had two poems, “Recipe for Approval” and “The Web of Your Love,” previously published in the university’s 2024 Unbreakable anthology. Gracie has also completed work experience at Treehouse Digital LTD, where she was able to work with professional filmmakers, allowing her to discover a love for storytelling. Her play, One Day You’ll Understand, was performed at a showcase at the Everyman Theatre in 2024.
Lizbeth Leigh Jones holds a degree in creative writing from the University of Arizona, where she received the Torrance Award for Outstanding Upperclassman in Creative Writing. Her recent poem “Apocalyptic Us” can be read in the current issue of Cagibi. Other works of short fiction and nonfiction have been published in Compendium, Persona, and Bainbridge Island Magazine. She currently lives in Atlanta, Georgia, where she works as a freelance writer, editor, and creativity coach. A description of services can be found on theliterarytherapist.com. She is a member of the Broadleaf Writers Association and the Editorial Freelance Association.
Tim Kahl is the author of six books of poems, most recently Omnishambles (Bald Trickster, 2019), California Sijo (Bald Trickster, 2022) and Drips, Spills, Bursts, Tangles, and Washes (Cold River Press, 2024). He is also an editor of Clade Song. He builds flutes, plays them, and plays guitars, ukuleles, charangos, and cavaquinhos, as well. He currently teaches at California State University, Sacramento, where he sings lieder while walking on campus between classes. Go to soundcloud.com/tnklbnny to hear his music.
Michael Moreth is a recovering Chicagoan living in the rural, micropolitan city of Sterling, the Paris of Northwest Illinois.
Hannah Page graduated from Columbia University in 2022 with an MFA in Creative Writing. She has been featured in Tupelo Quarterly, StreetLit, Half and One, Cathexis Northwest Press, and elsewhere. She is currently polishing her first full-length collection, To Unravel is Not Always to Fall Apart. She lives in Manhattan.
Sean Bw Parker (MA) is a writer, artist, and musician based in Worthing, West Sussex. He lived in Istanbul for ten years, has written or contributed to a number of books and albums, and has given a TED talk. He was born in Exeter in 1975.
Mary Paterson is a writer, artist, and curator based in London (UK). She writes mainly for performance, and her work has been presented around the world, including with Live Art DK (Copenhagen), Wellcome Collection (London) & Arnolfini (Bristol). Mary is the cofounder of Something Other, a platform for experimental writing and performance, which has been running since 2014. More recently turning to poetry, Mary’s poems have been published by Poetry Magazine, 3am Magazine, and Only Poem, amongst others.
Pamela Richardson is a writer and martial artist who lives in Charlotte, North Carolina, with her husband. She owns a Taekwondo studio, where she teaches children and adults martial arts. She has published in The Main Street Rag, Roi Fainéant, New Feathers Anthology, and Bulb Culture Collective, among others.
Carl Scharwath has appeared globally with 250+ publications selecting his writing or art. He has published four poetry books, and his latest book is The World Went Dark, published by Alien Buddha Press. He also has four photography books, published with Praxis and CreatiVingenuitiy. His photography was exhibited in the Mount Dora and Leesburg Centers for the Arts. Carl is currently an art editor at Glitterati and former editor for Minute Magazine. He was nominated with four Best of the Net Awards (2022–25) and two different 2023 Pushcart Nominations for poetry and a short story.
A. Michael Schultz is a writer and educator living in Northern Appalachia. His recent poetry appears or is forthcoming in Appalachian Journal, Willawaw Journal, The Collidescope, Poor Yorick, and elsewhere. He is assistant professor of English at Belmont College.
Dr. Ezra Harker Shaw (they/them) is a nonbinary writer from Scotland, now living in London. They are the author of the acclaimed literary novel The Aziola's Cry: A Novel of the Shelleys. They have written two plays, Tolstoy Tried to Kill My Partner and The Grouchy Octopus Story, and have been shortlisted for the Out-Spoken Prize for Poetry.
Ivanna Stepanova is a graduate of the Russian Academy of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture of Ilya Glazunov (Moscow), Faculty of Painting. She defended her diploma with honors in 2021 in the specialty “artist-painter.” She also graduated with honors from the academy’s assistantship-internship in the specialty “art of painting (easel painting).”
A member of the Union of Artists of Russia, she is a participant in numerous exhibitions of the union, as well as in exhibition projects in various Russian regions. She is also a participant in international exhibitions, including “Young Russian Culture in Italy” (2018), “Cultural Mission in Italy” (2021).
Samuel Totten is a novelist and short story writer. His first novel, All Eyes on the Sky, about life and death in the war-torn Nuba Mountains of Sudan, was published by African Studies Books in Kampala, Uganda. Recently, he has had short stories published and accepted by History Through Fiction, Frighten the Horses, both based in the United States and The Wise Owl in India.
Angela Townsend is a five-time Pushcart Prize nominee, seven-time Best of the Net nominee, and the 2024 winner of West Trade Review's 704 Prize for Flash Fiction. Her work appears or is forthcoming in Arts & Letters, Chautauqua, Epiphany, Five Points, Indiana Review, The Normal School, Pleiades, SmokeLong Quarterly, Terrain, and Under the Sun, among others. She graduated from Princeton Seminary and Vassar College.
Jonathan Chibuike Ukah is a Pushcart Prize–nominated poet from the UK. His poems have been featured in the Atticus Review, San Antonio Review, The Ephemeral Literary Review, Strange Horizons, The Pierian, The Unleash Lit, and elsewhere. He is the winner of the Alexander Pope Poetry Award 2023 and the second runner-up of the Wingless Dreamer Publishing Poetry Prize 2023.
Anna Ursyn, PhD, professor, University of Northern Colorado, has published twelve books and several book chapters. She has exhibited her work in over fifty single art shows/two hundred fine art exhibitions, including over a dozen times at the ACM SIGGRAPH Art Galleries and at the Louvre, Paris, NTT Museum in Tokyo (five thousand texts and two thousand images representing XX Century), and Virtual Media Network. Since 1987, she has been chair of the Symposium and Digital Art Gallery D-ART: International IEEE Conference on Information Visualisation (iV) London. Her artwork was selected to be sent to the Moon by NASA as a part of the MoonArk Project by Carnegie Mellon University. Her work has also appeared in traveling shows, including for Centre Pompidou, Paris. Her work in the ABAD exhibition is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. She also has work in the permanent collection of Museé de la Poste in Paris, France, and the Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC. To learn more, see her website at ursyn.com.
Kendra Whitfield lives and writes in Athabasca, Alberta, Canada. When not writing, she can be found swimming laps at the local pool or basking in sunbeams on her back deck. Her work has been anthologized by Community Building Art Works and Beyond the Veil Press.