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  • Contributors

Elliot Ackerman is the author of several books, most recently the novel 2034. His work has been nominated for the National Book Award, the Andrew Carnegie Medal in both fiction and nonfiction, and the Dayton Literary Peace Prize. He divides his time between New York City and Washington, DC.

Daniel Anderson has published three books of poems: The Night Guard at the Wilberforce Hotel, Drunk in Sunlight, and January Rain. He teaches on the faculty of the MFA Program at the University of Oregon.

Monica Black is Associate Professor of History at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Her book, A Demon-Haunted Land: Witches, Wonder Doctors, and the Ghosts of the Past in Post-WWII Germany was published in 2020 by Metropolitan.

Rachel Cusk is the author of Outline, Transit, and Kudos; the memoirs A Life's Work, The Last Supper, and Aftermath; and several other novels. Her next novel, Second Place, will be published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux in May 2021.

Katy Didden is the author of The Glacier's Wake (Pleiades Press 2013) and a forthcoming collection of multimodal erasure poems: Ore Choir: The Lava on Iceland (Tupelo Press 2022). She is an assistant professor at Ball State University.

Sidik Fofana received an MFA in creative writing from NYU and teaches high school in Brooklyn. His collection Stories from Our Tenants Downstairs is forthcoming from Scribner in 2021.

Brandon Haffner's stories appear in the Harvard Review, Beloit Fiction Journal, upstreet, the Carolina Quarterly, and elsewhere. He teaches creative writing at Longwood University and lives in Richmond, Virginia.

David H. Lynn was the editor of the Kenyon Review from 1994–2020 and is now editor emeritus, as well as professor of English at Kenyon College. He received an O. Henry Prize in 2016 for the short story "Divergence." His latest collection, Children of God: New & Selected Stories, was published in 2019 by Braddock Avenue Books.

Corey Marks is the author of Renunciation and The Radio Tree. He teaches at the University of North Texas.

Shane McCrae's most recent books are Sometimes I Never Suffered and The Gilded Auction Block, both published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. He lives in New York City and teaches at Columbia University.

Lorrie Moore is the author of stories and novels as well as a recent collection of thirty-five years of nonfiction. She teaches at Vanderbilt University.

Merritt Moseley is a retired English professor whose first contribution to the Sewanee Review appeared in Fall 1980.

John Psaropoulos studied ancient Greek at King's College London. He is now an independent journalist based in Athens, where he is Al Jazeera's accredited correspondent. His work has appeared in the American Scholar, the Critic, the Spectator, the Times Literary Supplement, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post, among others.

Michael Prior's poems have appeared in the New Republic, Poetry, Poetry Northwest, Narrative, the Academy of American Poets' Poem-a-Day series, and the Asian American Writers' Workshop's The Margins. He is the author of Burning Province (McClelland & Stewart/Penguin Random House 2020) and Model Disciple (Véhicule Press 2016).

Paisley Rekdal's most recent collection of poems is Nightingale (Copper Canyon Press 2019). Her newest book of nonfiction, Appropriate: A Provocation (W. W. Norton 2021), examines cultural appropriation in literature.

Adam Ross is the editor of the Sewanee Review, as well as the author of the novel Mr. Peanut and the short story collection Ladies and Gentlemen.

Brandon Taylor is the author of the novel Real Life, which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. His stories and essays have appeared or are forthcoming in The Cut, the New Yorker online, the New York Times, A Public Space, Gulf Coast, and elsewhere. His story collection Filthy Animals is forthcoming from Riverhead Books.

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