Issue 14 |
Fall 1978

Contributors' Notes

by Staff

MASTHEAD

Directors

DeWitt Henry

Peter O'Malley

Coordinating Editor for This Issue

DeWitt Henry

Associate Editors

Linda Bamber

Lorrie Goldensohn

CONTRIBUTORS

GAYATRI ACHARYA is Assistant Professor of English at George Mason University and is writing a book on autobiography.

LINDA BAMBER is Assistant Professor of English at Tufts. She writes book reviews for
The Boston Phoenix and is writing a book on women in Shakespeare.

PAUL BRESLIN is an Assistant Professor at Northwestern University. He has published articles and reviews in
Modern Philology, The Yale Review and
The American Scholar, and poetry in
The Georgia Review.

ASHLEY BROWN, one of the founders of
Shenandoah, teaches at the University of South Carolina; the author and editor of several books, and a translator of Brazilian poetry and fiction, he is preparing a collection of his essays for publication.

FRED CHAPPELL is a novelist (
The Gaudy Place), short story writer, poet and critic, who teaches at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

HALLVARD DAHLIE is Professor and Head of Department of English, University of Calgary. He has published on Canadian, American and Norwegian fiction, and is currently writing a book on realism in Canadian fiction, and a Twayne book on Brian Moore.

BRENDAN GALVIN teaches at Central Connecticut State College and has published two poetry collections,
No Time For Good Reasons and
The Minutes No One Owns.

LORRIE GOLDENSOHN'S poetry and criticism have appeared in
Shenandoah, American Poetry Review, American Book Review, Parnassus, Pushcart Prize, III, and elsewhere. She teaches at Hampshire College in Amherst.

ROBERT HASS lives in Berkeley and publishes widely in the literary presses. His essay, "Lowell's Graveyard," appears in
Pushcart Prize, III.

JAY PARINI teaches at Dartmouth College and is editor of the forthcoming
New England Review.

WILLIAM PEDEN is a novelist (
Twilight At Monticello), short story writer (
Night in Funland), editor, and critic, who teaches at the University of Missouri at Columbia. Former Director of the University of Missouri Press and editor of their Breakthrough series, he is co-fiction editor of the newly founded
Missouri Review.

ROBERT PINSKY is author of
Sadness and Happiness (poems) and
The Situation of Poetry (criticism). He teaches at Wellesley College.

CHRISTOPHER RICKS' latest book is
Tennyson. His first and best known book is
Milton's Grand Style. Editor of
Essays in Criticism, he was Visiting Professor at Brandeis last year, and is now at Christi College, Cambridge.

ROGER SALE, author of
Modern Heroism, teaches at the University of Washington in Seattle. His book on children's literature will be published this fall.

CARTER WILSON, author of
Green Tree, Dry Tree (and other novels), teaches at the University of California at Santa Cruz. He has recently translated (with Mario L. Davila) Ermilio Abreu Gomez's
Canek, and completed "a book of memories,"
Real Hope, a section of which appears in
Quarry West.