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Paul Nelson

Winter 2024 Cover of The Café Review

Paul Nelson: poet/interviewer, he founded the Cascadia Poetics LAB and the Cascadia Poetry Festival. Books include Haibun de la Serna (2022), A Time Before Slaughter/Pig War: & Other Songs of Cascadia (2020) American Prophets (interviews 19942012) (2018) and American Sentences (2015, 2021). He is coeditor of Cascadian Zen Volume I: Bioregional Writings on Cascadia Here and Now (2023, Watershed Press), Make it True meets Medusario (2019) (Spanish and English) and others. He is Literary Executor for the late poet Sam Hamill and lives in Rainier Beach, alongside TUX woo’ kwib Creek, in Seattle.

Paul Muldoon

Winter 2024 Cover of The Café Review

Paul Muldoon: is a contemporary Irish poet. His poetry is known for its difficult, sly, allusive style, casual use of obscure or archaic words, understated wit, punning, and deft technique in meter and slant rhyme. His work is often compared with Heaney, a fellow Northern Irish poet, friend, and mentor. He has published over thirty collections and won a Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, the T. S. Eliot Prize, and the 2003 Griffin International Prize for Excellence in Poetry.

Stelius Mormoris

Winter 2024 Cover of The Café Review

Stelius Mormoris: is CEO of Scent Beauty, Inc., which markets beauty products worldwide. A citizen of Greece and the U.S., he was born in New York, and lived most of his adult life in Paris. He is a contemporary artist, specializing in abstract oil painting. He first studied poetry in the Creative Writing Program at Princeton University where he received a B.A. in Architecture. He has been published in many journals. His debut book of poetry titled The Oculus was published October 2022 by Tupelo Press. He is an avid gardener and sailor and a former professional rugby player in France.

Michael McClure

Winter 2024 Cover of The Café Review

Michael McClure: (October 20, 1932 – May 4, 2020), beat poet, playwright, novelist, and documentary filmmaker born in Marysville, Kansas, and raised there and in Seattle. He gave his first poetry reading in 1955 alongside Allen Ginsberg, who gave his first public reading of “Howl,” when McClure organized the famous Six Gallery readings which would launch the legend of the Beat Poets and the San Francisco Renaissance. He was the author of numerous collections of poetry, recorded several CDs with Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek, wrote more than 20 plays and musicals, and the song “Mercedes Benz,” which was made famous by singer Janis Joplin. His honors included a fellowship from the Guggenheim Foundation, a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Alfred Jarry Award, as well as a Rockefeller grant for playwriting and an Obie Award for Best Play. He taught poetry at California College of the Arts for over 40 years and lived in Oakland with his wife, the sculptor Amy Evans McClure, before his death in 2020. A selection of his papers is held at the Bancroft Library of the University of California, Berkeley and at the Special Collections & Rare Books at Bennett Library, Simon Fraser University in British Columbia.