Waxwing Editors
Co-Founder
Co-Editor & Poetry Editor
Justin Bigos
editors@waxwingmag.org
Justin Bigos is the author of the poetry chapbook Twenty Thousand Pigeons (iO Books, 2014). His poems have appeared in magazines including Ploughshares, New England Review, Indiana Review, and The Gettysburg Review; his fiction has appeared or is forthcoming in The Best American Short Stories 2015, McSweeney’s, Ninth Letter, Memorious, and The Seattle Review; and his nonfiction has appeared in The Collagist. He lives in Flagstaff, Arizona, where he teaches creative writing at Northern Arizona University.
Co-Founder
Co-Editor & Prose Editor
Erin Stalcup
editors@waxwingmag.org
Erin Stalcup’s first story collection, And Yet It Moves, is forthcoming in Fall 2016 from Indiana University Press in their Break Away Books series. Her fiction has appeared in The Kenyon Review, Kenyon Review Online, The Sun, PANK, Hinchas de Poesía, and elsewhere, and she has creative nonfiction forthcoming or appearing in The Laurel Review and STIR. Erin received her MFA from Warren Wilson College’s Program for Writers, and later served as the Joan Beebe Fellow at Warren Wilson. After teaching in community colleges, universities, and prisons in New York City, North Carolina, and Texas, she is now faculty at her alma mater, Northern Arizona University, in her hometown of Flagstaff.
Co-Editor & Poetry Editor
W. Todd Kaneko
editors@waxwingmag.org
W. Todd Kaneko is the author of The Dead Wrestler Elegies (Curbside Splendor, 2014). His prose and poems have appeared in Bellingham Review, Los Angeles Review, Barrelhouse, The Normal School, The Collagist, and many other places. He has received fellowships from Kundiman and the Kenyon Review Writers Workshop and lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where he teaches at Grand Valley State University. Visit him at toddkaneko.com.
Translations Editor
Sarah Valentine
Sarah Valentine is the translator of Into the Snow: Selected Poems of Gennady Aygi (Wave Books, 2011). She has published widely in literary journals and is currently working on a memoir about discovering her African American heritage as an adult, which centers on unearthing family secrets and solving the mystery of her biological father's identity. Sarah received a PhD in Russian Literature from Princeton University, focusing on contemporary Russian poetry and poetics and has held fellowships at the Princeton Center for the Study of Religion and UCLA as a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow of the Humanities. Her scholarly monograph, Witness and Transformation: The Poetics of Gennady Aygi, is forthcoming from Academic Studies Press in May, 2015. Currently, Sarah teaches Creative Writing and Comparative Literature at Northwestern University in Evanston, IL.
Contributing Editor
Candice Amich
Candice Amich is an Assistant Professor of English at Vanderbilt University. She is at work on a book project entitled The Poetics of Globalization, in which she examines the aesthetic strategies Latina, Caribbean, US, and Latin American feminist poets and performance artists employ to counter the abstractions of globalization discourse. She earned her PhD in English from Rutgers University and holds an MFA in Poetry from New York University.
Contributing Editor
Corey Campbell
Corey Campbell’s fiction has appeared in The Gettysburg Review, Colorado Review, The Rattling Wall, Necessary Fiction, Gulf Stream, Jabberwock Review, Anderbo, and The Chamber Four Fiction Anthology, among other publications. A Tennessee Williams Scholar at the Sewanee Writers' Conference in 2014, she recently worked for Arizona State University's Creative Writing Program and led workshops with incarcerated writers in the Arizona State Prison Complex – Florence. She is a graduate of the Warren Wilson MFA Program for Writers and in 2015 will become a PhD student in creative writing and literature at the University of Houston. Ms. Campbell is completing her first collection of stories.
Contributing Editor
Anna Clark
Anna Clark is a journalist living in Detroit. Her reporting, essays, and book reviews have appeared in The New York Times, The New Republic, Grantland, The American Prospect, The Christian Science Monitor, Next City, and many others. She is a political media correspondent for the Columbia Journalism Review and a former Fulbright fellow in Kenya. She is also the editor of A Detroit Anthology. Anna is a writer-in-residence in city high schools, the founder of Literary Detroit, and a founding board member of Write A House. She is a graduate of the University of Michigan and the Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers.
Social Media Editor
Izzy Montoya
socialmedia@waxwingmag.org
Izzy Montoya is currently an undergraduate creative writing major at Arizona Sate University in Tempe, Arizona. He spends his time writing, reading, and studying both poetry and fiction. He is also a reader for RED INK magazine.
Poetry Reader
Grace Liew
Grace is from Malaysia. Her work has appeared in PANK, Winter Tangerine Review, and The Dirty Napkin. She holds a BA in philosophy and speaks four languages. She’s interested in women of color feminism, sexuality, and critical race theories, as well as their implications on language, poetics, and the abstraction of thought. She lives and teaches in Flagstaff, Arizona.
Poetry Reader
Rachel Andoga
Rachel Andoga is a poet from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Her work can be found in journals including Sundog Lit, Third Coast, Yew Journal, Yemassee, Coal Hill Review, as well as ... and love ... from Jacar Press. A graduate of the MFA program at Arizona State University, Rachel currently writes and teaches in Phoenix, Arizona.
Site Design
Beautymark Design Studio
info@beautymark.designstud.io
Waxwing was lovingly crafted under the art direction of Jason Robinson at Beautymark Design Studio in Flagstaff, AZ. The site was developed by Steve Tyree of Denver, CO, with invaluable assistance from Eddie Hillenbrand and Erin Stalcup. The waxwing feather illustration was produced in pen & ink (and graciously donated for our use) by Brian Kramer in West Orange, NJ. Thanks also to my lovely wife Aline: o poema eu amo traduzir mais do que todos.
Waxwing’s prose and poetry are vivified by the clarity and elegance of the Adobe Caslon Pro family, based on the enduring typography of William Caslon (1693–1766).