Jan Alexander is author of a novel, Getting to Lamma, and co-author of Bad Girls of the Silver Screen, a look at the way Hollywood has depicted prostitutes through the decades. Her upcoming novel is a utopian fantasy set in the wilds of China’s 21st century hyper-capitalism, inspired by her experiences as a correspondent in Asia. She is a long-time contributor to The Neworld Review and has reviewed books for The Chicago Tribune. As a financial journalist and China hand she has covered the global economy for Institutional Investor, Forbes Woman, Worth, the Wall Street Journal, Newsweek International, Money and the Economist Intelligence Unit, and has taught a class in Chinese civilization at CUNY Brooklyn College.
Larry Baker was a burlesque theatre Master-of-Ceremonies, journalist, movie theatre owner, Pinkerton security guard, Pizza Hut manager, and a City Councilor in Iowa…all before his first novel was published in 1997. That book, THE FLAMINGO RISING, was a Hallmark movie in 2001. His latest novel, FROM A DISTANCE, will be published in September of 2017.
Fred Beauford a novelist/essayist. He is the author of eight novels, a memoir, …and Mistakes Made Along the Way and two collections of essays, The Rejected American and The First Decade: Essays, 2000-2010, He is also a contributor to the Literary Conversation Series and The University Press of Mississippi. His works are also collected or cited in 38 additional books.
In addition, Beauford has edited 43 books, and co-edited four other books, and is the founder and Editor-in-Chief/Publisher of the Neworld Review.
He has worked as a university professor, magazine editor and publisher, book publisher and public relations executive.
Herb Boyd is an activist, author, educator, and journalist who writes for a number of publications, including the Amsterdam News, the Network Journal, and Neworld Review. His most recent work was done in collaboration with Ilyasah Shabazz, the daughter of Malcolm X. He recently completed Black Detroit--A People's History (Amistad Press), and he teaches African and African American history at the City College of New York.
TODD STEVEN BURROUGHS, Ph.D. is an independent researcher and writer based in Newark, N.J. He is the author of an audiobook, Son-Shine On Cracked Sidewalks, which deals with the 2014 mayoral election of Ras Baraka, the son of the late activist and writer Amiri Baraka, in Newark, N.J. The co-author with Herb Boyd of Civil Rights: Yesterday and Today and co-editor, with Jared A. Ball, of A Lie of Reinvention: Correcting Manning Marable’s Malcolm X, he is currently co-writing a book, with Wayne J. Dawkins, associate professor in Morgan State University’s School of Global Journalism & Communication, on Freedomways magazine.
A professional Field Engineer, Michael left his profession to pursue his lifelong passion for writing. He finished his first novel, Dreamphoric Slumber and is currently editing his second novel and writing his first screenplay.
Sally Cobau is a writer, editor, and teacher. Most recently she taught a college class for the Montana Youth Challenge, a military-style academy for students who earn their GED’s. Her non-fiction, fiction, and poetry has appeared in the Sun, Room Magazine, and LitRag. Having lived in Lincoln, Nebraska for several years, she recently returned to Montana with her three awesome kids and husband.
Steve Fisch is a person who wears many hats. On any given day he may be wearing his 'photography', 'producer', 'business affairs', 'lecturer', 'photo book author' and/or 'dad' hats, among many others. A native of Los Angeles, Steve is a member of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences and its Producers Peer Group, the Los Angeles Copyright Society, and sits on the Advisory Board of the Greater Los Angeles Writers Society. He's a graduate of both UCLA Film School and Loyola Law School. Recently launched is a new creative enterprise with V.J. Waks, an award winning Sci-Fi/Fantasy author and writer. The first projects in the development slate include a World War II epic, a period British romantic comedy (something Oscar Wilde would give to Agatha Christy), a contemporary American romantic comedy, and a British high-end Sci-Fi series. Also in development with producer Lydia Nibley is a contemporary love story based on the writings of Rumi, the 13th century poet. Steve’s Facebook friends enjoy photos from his early morning beach walks in Malibu. Steve can be reached at www.stephenfisch.com
Robert Fleming, a graduate of Columbia University's School of Journalism, was a former award-winning reporter for the New York Daily News. He served as a writer/consultant for Fred Friendly's "Media and Society" on PBS, and a former professor of film and journalism at the New School for Social Research in New York City. He has written and edited over thirteen books.
Kara's greatest passion is wrapped up in glamourproject. She and her co-founder, Evvy Shapero, travel to facilities for the homeless, for our veterans and their families,for children who are abused or neglected, for cancer patients…they will go almost anywhere they are needed to make people happy. With the help of devoted volunteers, they ‘glamorize' their subjects with make-up, furs and jewelry. At the end of their session, participants are given a gift bag and then sent a photo of themselves as a reminder of their day of beauty. This is an opportunity for those who have forgotten, that they are worthwhile and beautiful! Complementing her passion for the disenfranchised, is Kara's love of animals. Dogs and pigs are her most adored subjects. With a Master’s degree in psychology, and a background in Entertainment Advertising Design, she uses her experience, camera, education and words to add happiness to the world around her. For more about what kara does, please see www.karasbest.com.
Janet Garber, MA, has recently been released from bondage (30 years in HR 😀)and let loose in the supply cabinet amid the crayons, pens and pencils to do her worst. In addition to many journalistic articles, essays and reviews and one nonfiction book, she now has had her poetry and fiction published in a dozen literary journals. Her comic novel, Dream Job, Wacky Adventures of an HR Manager, was released in March 2016. Janet lives in northern Westchester with her husband and two rescue cats and can't quite believe that her day job now is writing. Please visit her at www.janetgarber.com.
Brenda M. Greene is Chair of the English Department, Director of the National Black Writers Conference, and Executive Director of the Center for Black Literature at Medgar Evers College of the City University of New York. She is the editor of The African Presence and Influence on the Cultures of the Americas, Cambridge Scholars Publishing (2010), a book of essays, which focus on the impact of Africa in the Americas from the perspectives of literature, language, music, dance, and psychology.
She is co-editor with Fred Beauford of Resistance and Transformation: Conversations with Black Writers, Morton Books (2010), and Meditations and Ascensions: Black Writers on Writing, Third World Press (2008), co-editor of Redefining Ourselves, Black Writers in the Nineties, Peter Lang Publishers (1999) and co-editor of Rethinking American Literature, National Council of Teachers of English, (1997).
Greene also hosts a weekly radio program, Writers on Writing, on WNYE, 91.5 F.M..
Dr. Greene holds a PhD in English from New York University.
Jane M McCabe was born in Billings, Montana and attended grade school, junior high and high school there. In 1959 she was the valedictorian of her high school class. After attending Eastern Montana College for two years, majoring in pre-med, she transferred to and graduated from the University of Washington in Seattle with a BA in Art and a minor in English. She got her Master’s degree in Fine Art in Painting from the San Francisco Art Institute. She attended Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minnesota for three years.
She taught her entire life all the while continuing to work as a writer and painter. For five year she worked for the San Francisco Unified School District as a Children’s Center teacher. For three years she taught in the Art Department at Eastern Montana College. During the 24 years she lived in New York City she taught in numerous adult training facilities and colleges, including Pratt Manhattan and the New School.
She has written the following:
She has written and illustrated the following:
She has illustrated the following:
To review the altarpiece Jane painted in 2011 please go to this Video. To view Jane McCabe’s paintings please go to www.janemmccabe-paintings.com
Jane now lives and works in Los Angeles. She has a dachshund named Sadie. She has been writing for the Neworld Review for eight years.
Amanda Martin was born and raised in Los Angeles, the daughter of a writer. After graduating from UC Berkeley, she returned to LA and has spent many years working in the entertainment industry in various capacities, including script reading. She currently works for the public television station KCET.
M. J. Moore was born in Chicago. He grew up in Ashburn, an enclave on the Southwest Side of the Windy City. Moore graduated from the University of Illinois, where he was a prize-winning columnist for The Daily Illini.
His college journalism won the praise of Norman Mailer, to whom clips were sent. Mailer’s gracious words were echoed by an equally affirmative note from novelist William Styron. Since 2013, Moore’s essays, Op-Eds, and book reviews have appeared in the Neworld Review, The Paris Review~Daily, and the International New York Times.
He is now completing a biography of author Mario Puzo.
Michael Moreau has worked as a newspaper reporter and editor and for the last 20 years has taught college English and journalism classes. He has ghostwritten books, and edited a trove of letters published as John Fante and H.L. Mencken: A Personal Correspondence by Black Sparrow Press.
He is currently writing a life of John Ryan, an Irishman who escaped the potato famine of the mid-19th century to find a life in California where he rose from a cable car operator in San Francisco to general manager of the Pacific Coast Borax Company and superintendent of the Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad. A ghost town in Death Valley bears his name. Ryan was Moreau’s grandfather.
He is a newer contributor to Neworld Review, who has been delighted to discover this literary oasis.
Molly Moynahan is a novelist, essayist and college essay coach who lives in Chicago, IL. Her latest essay will be published soon on Vida.com. She has recently finished her fourth novel, OTHER PEOPLE'S CHILDREN, is working on a divorce memoir and wrote the coaching book, PITCH PERFECT: How to Write a Successful College Admission Essay. Her blog, don't you know who I am?, and website.
Phillip Sheppard conceived and conceptualized the novel, The Specialist: The Costa Rica Job. At the ripe age of 16, Phillip left home and gained emancipation as a legal adult, as he worked his way through high school. Due to Phillip’s ambition, and the manner of which he conducted himself at a young age, he was accepted into a program that allowed him to enroll into college simultaneously, while still a senior in high school.
Following in his father’s footsteps, he served in the United States Marines. After leaving the service he became the first African American Executive Vice-President of Marketing and Sales at the Eastman Kodak Company. In addition, he has worked for the US Army, and as a federal agent for the Defense Investigative Service, the Naval Investigative Service, and the Office of Counter Intelligence, US Department of State.
Phillip is well known for his recurring role on CBS’ TV series, Survivor. He won favorite reality star at the 2013 Callywood Awards, with over 97,000 fans voting.
Emily Rosen, MS,. MA, a freelance writer, and instructor of a writing workshop in Boca Raton, Florida, She edited two volumes of anthologized stories from her classes, "Memories, Milestones and Memoirs: Selections from a writing workshop," Volume One (2005) and Two (2010 ). She also edits manuscripts. www.emilyrosen424.com.
Jane Smiley's novel A Thousand Acres won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award in 1992; her novel The All True Travels and Adventures of Lidie Newton won the 1999 Spur Award for Best Novel of the West. She has been a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters since 1987.
Her novel Horse Heaven was short-listed for the Orange Prize in 2002, and her novel, Private Life, was chosen as one of the best books of 2010 by The Atlantic, The New Yorker, and The Washington Post.
She has written several works of nonfiction, including Thirteen Ways of Looking at the Novel and The Man Who Invented the Computer. She has also published five volumes of a horse series for young adults, The Horses of Oak Valley Ranch.
Her new novel, recently published, Some Luck, is the first volume of a trilogy entitled The Last Hundred Years. Volume Two will be out in 2015.
Jane Smiley received her BA from Vassar College in 1971, her MFA from the University of Iowa Writer’s Workshop in 1976, and her PhD in English with Creative Dissertation from the University of Iowa in 1978.
Jerry W. Ward, Jr., author of The Katrina Papers: A Journal of Trauma and Recovery (2008), The China Lectures (2014), and Fractal Song: Poems (2016), lives in New Orleans, LA.
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