Susan Drucker
Susan Drucker: lives and works in Bowdoinham, Maine. Portland Phoenix reviewer Nicholas Schroeder writes: “Susan Drucker’s . . . drawings are stunning. Dead things and ephemera . . . are rendered as if characters in an intimate society. Drucker’s delicate, expert shading not only marks the frailty of her subjects, but lends a constant presence of warm, diffuse light. Most impressive about this imagery is how fresh it appears; though the characters are familiar (and share similarities with Native American art), their physical, spatial relationships suggest a new, uncoded symbology, like an animal language.” Her work can be viewed at www.susandrucker.com
Roger Camp
Roger Camp: his images have been published in over 100 magazines, most recently on the covers of The New England Review, Redivider, and Lumina. He is the author of three books of photography, Butterflies in Flight (Thames & Hudson 2002), 500 Flowers (Dewi Lewis Media 2005), and Heat (Charta/DAP 2009). He was formerly a contract photographer with Black Star, NYC, and Corbis. His documentary photography has been awarded a Leica Medal of Excellence and his work is represented by the Robin Rice Gallery, NYC.
Sara Toruño – Conley
lives in San Francisco. She is the Poetry Review Editor for Boxcar Poetry Review, and her poetry has appeared in Ginosko, Temenos, Monday Night, Artistic Rights, and Perigee. Her poem “Erzebet Bathory’s Hazel Tree” was a CommonLine Journal honorable mention in 2007 and her poem “St. Stephen’s Church” was a CommonLine Journal noteworthy selection in 2008. She has an M.F.A. in creative writing and is an adjunct English Instructor at San Jose City College.
Jeffrey Thomson
is the author of four books of poems, including Birdwatching in Wartime, winner of the 2010 Maine Book Award and the 2011 ASLE Award in Environmental Creative Writing, and Renovation. In January 2012 he commenced a six month appointment as the Fulbright Distinguished Scholar in Creative Writing at the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry at Queen’s University.









