Terry Bain is a freelance writer, book designer and compositor. Hes had stories published in Cutbank, The Gettysburg Review, Northwest Boulevard, Prize Stories 1994: The O. Henry Awards, and The Quarterly. Hes currently finishing up a collection of short stories titled Calling Them Rain and Calling Them River, and is writing a novel. You may visit his web site at http://members.aol.com/tbain, and you may email him at terrybain@bigfoot.com. He lives in Spokane with his wife and son. All three are anxiously awaiting the first pitch of the baseball season. Luis Núñez reports: I have published "Disposable People" in the Americas Review and "The Stain" in Magic Realism. "The Lavender House," won Second Prize Best Fiction and was published in the 1998 Fall issue of AIM Quarterly. Also, another story, "Guava Branches" will be coming out in them Missouri Writers Guilds annual Well Versed in Spring of 1999. Currently I am trying to find a publisher for my novel, Chiaroscuro. I work as a Freelance Creative Director and teach at Portfolio Center in Atlanta. I live with my lovely wife Pamela and our two cats, Simón Bolívar and Ché Guevara. My e-mail is luisnew@ix.netcom.com. Robert Raven (Guest Editor) is a 1970s graduate of the University of Iowa Writers Workshop who evaded fiction writing for nearly two decades to pursue a career in industrial paleontology. He returned to writing about four years ago, and has completed a novel and several stories, "The Destroyer of Dreams" being the first to see publication. He lives in Anchorage, Alaska, where in addition to writing he spends time keeping snow off his driveway, moose out of his garden and bears out of his garage. He can be reached at rraven@alaska.net. Roy Scarbrough (Guest Editor) labored for years as a newspaper journalist, which at the time seemed to be a sensible thing for him to do as a writer. Not so sensible was flying off to Spain to run from the bulls in Pamplona. In recent years, his sensibilities turned to fiction. He taught community college English for a while, but happily discovered the merits of menial jobs and irregular employment upon a writerly life. He lives in Ashland, Oregon, a mountain town that lures in tourists with Shakespeare plays. His Zoetrope- workshoped story, "Sleeping Dogs" is in the current Florida Review. roy9951@aol.com.
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