Contributors, continued
Contributors |
Kajsa WibergKajsa Wiberg is a freelance writer and horse trainer. Her stories have appeared in The River Walk Journal, Long Story Short, Prose Toad, Chick Lit Review, The Rose & Thorn, Shred of Evidence, DiddleDog, Flash Shot, Every Day Fiction, Why Vandalism?, Big Pulp, Clever, Dark Fire, Aoifeʼs Kiss, Eskimo Pie and Insolent Rudder. She is a script reader for Blue Cat Screenplay, and a book reviewer for Eclectica. She lives in Cardiff-by-the-Sea, CA, where she is at work on her second novel. |
David SklarDavid Sklar writes in the spaces between the impossible magic of legend, the inscrutable magic of dreams, and the breathtaking everyday magic of the world in which we live. His first novella, Shadow of the Antlered Bird, will be published by Drollerie Press as an e-book in 2008 and as a chapbook in 2009, and he has short fiction slated for publication in Space & Time and two upcoming Drollerie Press anthologies. David’s published works include poetry in several publications, including Blue Light Red Light, Wormwood Review, and Paterson Literary Review;, and satire in The Cynic, The Wittenburg Door, and The FarceHaven Tribune. He lives in New Jersey with his wife, their 2-year-old son, and a retired housecat from Cleveland. Visit his website for more fiction and poetry from David Sklar. |
Amy J. BeneschAmy J. Benesch has published twelve short stories, in Aboriginal Science Fiction, Midnight Zoo, Short Stuff, Space and Time, Tales of the Unanticipated, (issues 14, 18, and 20), Millennium Science Fiction & Fantasy, The Darklands Project, and peridotbooks.com. Her story, “The Crone’s Tale” is archived in the on-line magazine Lorelei Signal, and she has a story in the anthology Into the Dreamlands, which came out in May 2007 from Simian Publishing. The story from Space and Time was cited in the Honorable Mentions section of The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror Seventh Annual Edition, edited by Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling. She’s also been known to write poetry from time to time. She lives in Yonkers, NY. More of her work can be found on her web site. |
Reynaldo MolinaWire Sculptor, Artist, Graphic Designer. Reynaldo Molina started working with wire 5 years ago. He enjoys working with such a versatile and malleable medium. From conception to reality, he has created scores of figures, from mermaids, to monsters, to Hollywood characters and stars. For more incredible wire art, check out his website, reynaldomolinawire.com. |
John HayesJohn Hayes appeared recently as Al Lewis in The Sunshine Boys and as a peanut vendor in Love and Peanuts, a one act play he wrote. He exhibits his sculpture wherever he can find an outlet and likes to read poetry at open mikes. He has been published in such magazines as Thema, BareBone, Carleton Arts Review, Cemetery Moon, Lynx Eye, Niteblade, and Hungur. Visit his web site to see his sculpture and more poetry. |
Erika JahnekeErika Jahneke learned all she knows about faith, rounding out the third generation (on her mother’s side) of yellow-dog Democrats, in her family in Goldwater Country. This is also how she’s kept stocked in homicidal impulses, fueling her ambition to be the Pelecanos of the Southwest. She started writing Crip in the Game the week she got her first calls from bill collectors, but she doesn’t endorse the drug economy as a route to economic independence. Her work has appeared in disability and pop culture journals and she’s working on a second novel while waiting for the call from HBO. |
| Contributors, continued on the next page |