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Chilicas, Eve One of the things I like about reading and writing a haiku, is the beauty of expressing a thought within just a few simple lines. While it is emotive to write a long descriptive poem, it is transforming to capture the essence of a thought like a snap shot from the mind's eye. I love the art of poetr |
Chircop, Charmaine Born in 1977 ,on the island of Malta |
Chodzinski, Kevin |
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Christ, Jim "where I think, I am" |
Christianson, Brent Brent Christianson is a native of LaCrosse, Wisconsin currently living in Madison, Wisconsin with his wife, Rebecca. He is a retired campus pastor (Lutheran) and has published in journals including Journal of the American Medical Society (JAMA), Off the Coast, Out of Line, Main Channel Voices, Into |
Christmas, Frank Frank Christmas, a lifelong New Englander, studied creative writing and journalism at Northeastern University and theology with a retired Jesuit. His stories and poems have appeared in Painted Bride Quarterly, the Seattle, Chiron, and Northwest reviews, Manoa, Gulf Stream, an upcoming anthology reco |
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Christy, Alice |
Chronister, Ben Ben Chronister is a very new author who spends most of his time planning escape routes in the event of a zombie apocalypse |
Chun, Joy |
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Chung, Ian Ian Chung is an English Literature and Creative Writing finalist at the University of Warwick. His work has appeared in Quarterly Literary Review Singapore, Foundling Review, The Cadaverine and Poetry Quarterly, among others. He was nominated by Camroc Press Review for Sundress Publications' 2010 Be |
Churchill, Sef |
Ciopryna, Cassie |
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Cipriano, Lorraine Lorraine Rose has been published in the following publications by Writing Knights Press: "Unbound", "Out on the Streets", "The Squire: Grand Tournament III Anthology", "Page-A-Day Poetry Anthology 2015", "1,000 Paper Cranes", "Writing Knights Press 2014 Anthology" and "The Squire: Grand Tournament I |
Clark, Nicky I am a life-long poetry enthusiast and avid reader. I find haiku to be the most dynamic form of poetry; the power and emotion of haiku is, in my opinion, the quintessential end of language. There is nothing beyond it, nothing. |
Clark Monagle, Sarah Sarah Clark Monagle is an educator, mother, writer, photographer and brain tumor survivor. Her work has been published in poetry reviews, and she is a regular contributor the CHICKEN SOUP FOR THE SOUL series. She is currently working on a poetry collection and a novel. You can follow her at www.sa |