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Café Review 2014 Summer Issue

Our Summer 2014 Issue is now available featuring poetry by D. Brown, Neeli Cherkovski, Andy Clausen, David Cope,  George Economou, Oz Hardwick, David Meltzer, Loie Merritt, John Michael Mouskos, Rochelle Owens, Stephen Petroff, James Reidel, Julie Rogers, Pamela Twining and Florence Weinberger.

It also features artwork from Berri Kramer, George Lloyd and Susan Wilder, as well as reviews by Michael Christian, Christopher Hornbacker and Mark Schorr.

Café Review 2014 Spring Issue

Cover of the Cafe Review Spring 2014 Issue
Cover of the Cafe Review Spring 2014 Issue

Our Spring 2014 Issue is now available featuring poetry by Grace Andreacchi, Michael Boughn, Anselm Berrigan, George Bowering, Matthew Caley, George Chopping, Jim Daniels, Xue Di, Stephen Ellis, Natasha Georgievska, Gerald Locklin, Adrian C. Louis, Anne Elezabeth Pluto, Vanessa Vie, and an interview with poet Xue Di.

It also features artwork from Andrew Abbott, Mirle Freel, Hafid Lalaoui, and Jean Meyer, as well as reviews by Sharon Olinka, Kristen Stake, and Kevin Sweeney.

Café Review 2014 Winter Issue

Winter 2014 issue of the Café Review
Winter 2014 issue of the Café Review

Our Winter 2014 Issue is now available featuring poetry by Dick Allen, John Blair, Karina Borowicz, Mike Bove, John F. Buckley, W. E. Butts, Danny Caine, Roger Camp, Mark DeFoe, Timothy Gillis, Raymond Hall, Leonore Hildebrandt, Peter Krok, Sydney Lea, Wesley McNair, Paul Pines, S Stephanie, Joshua Sullivan, Helene Swarts, Mimi White, Howard Winn and an interview with Charles Simic.

It also features artwork from John Angelopoulas, W. E. Butts, Katherine Doyle, S Stephanie and reviews by Megan Grumbling and Jefferson Navicky.

John Angelopoulas

Things Were Not..., 12"x12" oil on canvas by John Angelopoulas

John Angelopoulas:  a selftaught artist whose Greek heritage has played a pivotal part in the development of his art. Influenced by the multimedia work of his uncle and mentor, Robert J. Andrews, an internationally acclaimed iconographer, Angelopoulas’ paintings combine the fantastical world of religion and mythology. A New Hampshire native, he has lived on the seacoast in Portsmouth for the past 25 years. The four paintings which appear in this issue are visual interpretations of poems written by Charles Simic.