Ross Andersen
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Ross Andersen is a senior editor at The Atlantic, where he oversees the science, technology, and health sections. He joined The Atlantic in 2015. He was previously the deputy editor of Aeon magazine, and before that, he was the science editor of the Los Angeles Review of Books. In addition to his work as an editor, he is known for his award-winning feature essays, which straddle philosophy, technology, science, history, and the arts. |
Ronald Barber
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Ronald D. Barber, a shareholder at Strassburger McKenna Gutnick & Gefsky in Pittsburgh, is an experienced trial lawyer who concentrates on media and First Amendment law and personal injury, professional malpractice and commercial litigation. Mr. Barber served as law clerk to the Honorable Ronald W. Folino of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County. He also has taught high school history and college and postgraduate media law and ethics classes. Mr. Barber is a native of Tacoma, Washington. |
Jaswinder Bolina
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Jaswinder Bolina is author of the poetry collections Carrier Wave (2006) and Phantom Camera (2012) and the chapbook The Tallest Building in America (2014). His poems, which explore intersections between personal experience, politics, physics, and metaphysics, have appeared in numerous U.S. and international literary journals and in The Best American Poetry series. His essays on the relationship between language, race, class, and culture have appeared at The Poetry Foundation dot org, The Huffington Post, The State, The Writer, and in a number of anthologies including Poets on Teaching (University of Iowa Press 2011), Language: A Reader for Writers (Oxford University Press 2013), and in the 14th edition of The Norton Reader. Bolina is a professor of poetry in the MFA Program at the University of Miami. |
Torie Bosch
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Torie Bosch is the editor of Future Tense, a collaboration between Slate, New America, and Arizona State University that examines emerging technologies and their effects on public policy and society. Before becoming the Future Tense editor, she edited Slate’s medical and religion departments and served as the magazine’s first social media manager. Torie is a graduate of Penn State University, where she majored in English with minors in business, media studies, and Latin. On Twitter, she is @thekibosch. |
Jamie Brickhouse
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Jamie Brickhouse is the author of the critically-acclaimed Dangerous When Wet: A Memoir of Booze Sex and My Mother (St. Martin’s Press). Brickhouse has been published in the New York Times, Washington Post, The Daily Beast, Salon, Out, Huffington Post, POZ, Amtrak’s Arrive, as well as other places. Brickhouse is a comedic storyteller and a two-time StorySLAM winner of The Moth, a Literary Death Match champion, and just finished a week-long New York engagement of the solo show based on his memoir, which won an Audience Choice Award and received rave reviews in NY Theater Guide, Theater is Easy, and Hi! Drama.
Brickhouse has taught the art and craft of memoir writing and book marketing and publicity at CNF Writers’ Conference, the Columbia Publishing Course, and other venues across the country and in Mexico. He lives in Manhattan with common-law husband Michael.
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Andrew Conte
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Andrew Conte serves as the founding director of Point Park University’s Center for Media Innovation. He also is a contributing writer at the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review and a best-selling nonfiction author. Andrew’s latest book, All About Roberto Clemente, tells the story of the Pirates outfielder and Puerto Rican native. It’s written for advanced elementary and middle school readers. Previously, Andrew wrote The Color of Sundays, which explores the role of race in the National Football League and how the Pittsburgh Steelers used the league’s prejudice to the team’s advantage. He also authored the best-selling sports book Breakaway, which was re-released in paperback in the fall of 2016 with a new chapter on the Penguins hockey team’s latest Stanley Cup championship.
Andrew is a graduate of Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism and Dickinson College. Read more at AndrewConte.com.
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Hattie Fletcher
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Hattie Fletcher has been the managing editor of Creative Nonfiction magazine since 2005. Essays she has edited have been reprinted in The Best American Essays, The Best American Travel Writing, and The Best Women’s Travel Writing and have been awarded the Pushcart Prize. She has also worked on books covering such topics as end-of-life care, personalized medicine, education, mental health, and parenting. She was a coordinating editor for the Best Creative Nonfiction series, published by W.W. Norton, and is co-editor, with Lee Gutkind, of True Stories, Well Told … from the first 20 years of Creative Nonfiction magazine (In Fact Books, 2014). |
Callie Garnett
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Callie Garnett is an Assistant Editor at Bloomsbury, where her projects include High Notes, the selected writings of Gay Talese, the forthcoming essays of Blues historian Robert Gordon, and the brilliant (she doesn’t mind saying) novels of Aaron Thier. She is also a poet—author of Hallelujah, I’m a Bum from Ugly Duckling Presse. Her poems have been published in Company, Prelude, and jubilat, She has a Masters in English from the University of Iowa, and she lives in Brooklyn. |
Chris Girman
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Chris Girman is an assistant professor of creative nonfiction at Point Park University. His books include the ethnographic memoir, Mucho Macho, and the semi-autobiographical novel, The Chili Papers. He formerly practiced immigration law along the south Texas border, an experience he credits with introducing him to the importance of voice and characterization in nonfiction writing. His work has appeared in Glass: A Journal of Poetry, The Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change, Gender & Society, and the recent anthology What I Didn’t Know: True Stories of Becoming a Teacher. He is currently working on a series of stories about his time as an attorney and part-time Uber driver. |
Cris Hoel
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Cris Hoel is a lawyer and former journalist who has focused on legal issues confronting writers and publishers for 30 years. Cris was a reporter and editor at the Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, and Austin American-Statesman for five years before representing broadcasters, publishers, and authors as a lawyer with law firms Buchanan Ingersoll and Schnader Harrison. He has been a guest lecturer in journalism and media law at the University of Pittsburgh and Duquesne University. |
Anne Horowitz
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Anne Horowitz is a Brooklyn-based freelance book editor. Until 2010, she was associate editor at Counterpoint/Soft Skull Press, where she worked for five years. As an independent editor, she works on a range of projects, including both general-interest nonfiction and memoir and literary and commercial fiction, in both a developmental editing and line editing capacity. Her clients include independent presses such as Tin House Books, Seal Press, Grove Atlantic, Creative Nonfiction/In Fact Books, The Experiment, Catapult, Library Journal, and Hal Leonard Corporation, as well as individual authors and literary agents. She is also an editor and part-time associate working with the agent Reneé Zuckerbrot at Massie & McQuilkin Literary Agency. |
Maggie Jones
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Maggie Jones is a contributing writer to the New York Times Magazine. She’s reported on immigration, race, teenagers, education, adoption and other social issues in the United States, as well as in Japan, S. Korea, Guatemala, and Thailand. She was a finalist for a National Magazine Award and a Nieman Fellow. She is also currently a Visiting Assistant Professor at University of Pittsburgh’s MFA program. |
Adam Keiper
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Adam Keiper is the editor of and a cofounder of The New Atlantis, a quarterly journal that explores the political, ethical, and social implications of modern science and technology. He is also editor of TheNewAtlantis.com and of the New Atlantis Books series. In addition, he is the editor of Big Questions Online, a web magazine dedicated to the "big questions" of human purpose, existence, and the universe. He is also a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, a think tank in Washington, D.C., where he directs the program on Science, Technology, and Society. And he serves as the chief of staff of the Witherspoon Council on Ethics and the Integrity of Science, a private commission of scholars interested in the ethical and political questions raised by advancing biotechnology. He writes and speaks on such subjects as space policy, neuroethics, and the social and political implications of emerging technologies like robotics and nanotechnology. He is a contributing editor to National Affairs and Current, and his essays and articles have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Weekly Standard, Philanthropy, and elsewhere. He formerly worked in a corporate government-affairs office and as a staffer in the U.S. House of Representatives. He has a bachelor's degree in political science from American University. |
Nadine Kenney Johnstone
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Nadine Kenney Johnstone is the author of the memoir, Of This Much I'm Sure. She teaches writing at Loyola University and received her MFA from Columbia College in Chicago. Her work has been featured in Chicago magazine, The Moth, PANK, and various anthologies, including The Magic of Memoir. Nadine is a writing coach who presents at conferences internationally. She lives near Chicago with her family. Follow her at nadinekenneyjohnstone.com. |
Cheston Knapp
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Cheston Knapp is managing editor of Tin House. His book, Up Up, Down Down, a collection of essays, is forthcoming from Scribner in February, 2018. With his wife and son, he lives a life of reluctant modesty in Portland, OR. |
Maggie Messitt
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Maggie Messitt is author the author of The Rainy Season, long-listed for the 2016 Sunday Times Alan Paton Award in South Africa, where she was a journalist and editor for 8 years. Since returning to the US, her essays and reportage have been published in Creative Nonfiction, Mother Jones, River Teeth, and the Southern Poverty Law Center's Teaching Tolerance magazine, among others. Editor of Proximity, a quarterly collection of true stories, Messitt earned her MFA from Goucher College and (is one dissertation defense away from her) PhD in Creative Nonfiction from Ohio University. Messitt currently teaches in the low-residency MFA programs at Goucher College and Carlow University, and is working on her next book, a hybrid of investigation and memoir. |
Dinty W. Moore
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Dinty W. Moore is author of The Story Cure: A Book Doctor’s Pain-Free Guide to Finishing Your Novel or Memoir, the memoir Between Panic & Desire, and many other books. He has published essays and stories in The Southern Review, The Georgia Review, Harper's, the New York Times Sunday Magazine, Arts & Letters, and The Normal School among numerous other venues. A professor of nonfiction writing at Ohio University, Moore lives in Athens, Ohio, where he grows heirloom tomatoes and edible dandelions. |
Adriana E. Ramírez
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Adriana E. Ramírez is a Mexican-Colombian writer, critic, and performance poet based in Pittsburgh. She won the inaugural PEN/Fusion Emerging Writers Prize in 2015 for her novella-length work of nonfiction, Dead Boys (Little A, 2016), and in 2016 she was named Critic at Large for the Los Angeles Times Book Section. Her essays and poems have also appeared in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Guernica/PEN America, Literary Hub, Convolution, HEArt, Apogee, and on Nerve.com. Once a nationally ranked slam poet, she cofounded the Pittsburgh Poetry Collective and continues to perform on stages around the country. She and novelist Angie Cruz founded Aster(ix) Journal, a literary journal giving voice to the censored and the marginalized. Her debut full-length work of nonfiction, The Violence, is forthcoming from Scribner. |
Shannon Reed
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Shannon Reed is a frequent contributor to the the New Yorker's "Shouts and Murmurs" department as well as McSweeney's Internet Tendency. Other credits include the Washington Post, BuzzFeed, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, the Chronicle of Higher Education, Eater, Guernica, Poets & Writers, and many more. She is a visiting lecturer at the University of Pittsburgh. www.shannonreed.org. |
Anjali Sachdeva
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Anjali Sachdeva’s work has been published in Creative Nonfiction, Iowa Review, Yale Review, Gulf Coast, Alaska Quarterly Review, and The Literary Review, among others, and her short story “Pleiades” was included in Best American Nonrequired Reading. For six years she worked at the Creative Nonfiction Foundation, where she served as Director of Educational Programs. She is a graduate of the Iowa Writer’s Workshop and has taught at the University of Iowa, Iowa Summer Writing Festival, Augustana College, and Carnegie Mellon University, and currently teaches at the University of Pittsburgh. Her short story collection, All the Names They Used for God, will be published by Spiegel & Grau, a division of Random House, in 2018. |
Daniel Sarewitz
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Daniel Sarewitz is professor of science and society in the School for the Future of Innovation and Society, and co-director and co-founder of the Consortium for Science, Policy, and Outcomes, at Arizona State University . He is the editor of the magazine Issues in Science and Technology, and a regular columnist for Nature. His most recent book is The Techno-Human Condition. |
Ira Sukrungruang
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Ira Sukrungruang is the author of the memoirs Southside Buddhist and Talk Thai: The Adventures of Buddhist Boy, the short story collection The Melting Season, and the poetry collection In Thailand It Is Night. He is the coeditor of two anthologies on the topic of obesity: What Are You Looking At? The First Fat Fiction Anthology and Scoot Over, Skinny: The Fat Nonfiction Anthology. He is the recipient of the 2015 American Book Award, New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in Nonfiction Literature, an Arts and Letters Fellowship, and the Emerging Writer Fellowship. His work has appeared in many literary journals, including Post Road, The Sun, and Creative Nonfiction. He is one of the founding editors of Sweet: A Literary Confection (sweetlit.com), and teaches in the MFA program at University of South Florida. For more information about him, please visit: www.buddhistboy.com. |