Contributors · G – H
Timothy Gager
Ann Marie Gamble
Robbie Gamble
is the author of A Can of Pinto Beans from Lily Poetry Review Press. His poems have appeared in Lunch Ticket, RHINO, Rust + Moth, Spillway, and The Sun. He divides his time between Boston and Vermont.
Bill Garvey
is a dual citizen of the US and Canada, who lives in Toronto for six months and on the coast of Nova Scotia the other six, with his wife, Jean. His poems have appeared in Nixes Mate Review, Cloud Lake Literary, Margie, New Verse News, The Worcester Review, 5AM, Slant, Concho River Review, New York Quarterly, and others.
Gail Goepfert
is an associate editor at RHINO Poetry, and a Midwest poet. She has three book publications – A Mind on Pain (2015), Tapping Roots (2018), and Get Up, Said the World (2020). She has a collaborative chapbook, This Hard Business of Living, and a book, Self-Portrait with Thorns, being released in 2021.
Howie Good
Susan Goodman
Roberta Gould
Mitchell Grabois
Vincent Green
was published in the Journal of Poetry Therapy (December 2018) and is forthcoming in Euphony Journal and Packingtown Review.
Melanie Greenberg
Dave Gregory
John Grey
is an Australian poet, US resident, recently published in Sheepshead Review, Stand, Poetry Salzburg Review and Hollins Critic. Latest books, Leaves On Pages, Memory Outside The Head, and Guest Of Myself are available through Amazon. Work upcoming in Ellipsis, Blueline and International Poetry Review.
Robert Guard
has been published in Harpur Palate, Amoskeag, Chaffin Journal, Chapman Law Review, California Quarterly, Clackamas Literary Review, Nimrod, Poet Lore, Weave, riverSedge, and others. Robert attended the Kenyon Review Writers Workshop and studied under David Baker and Rosanna Warren. He worked for thirty-five years in advertising as a writer and creative director. Robert teaches yoga and has an energy healing practice. He also conducts workshops on various health and fitness topics including meditation and stress reduction.
Tímea Gulisio
Andrew S. Guthrie
Alan Halford
Max Heinegg
Yvonne Higgins Leach
spent decades balancing a career in communications and public relations, raising a family, and pursuing her love of writing poetry. Her first collection of poems is called Another Autumn. Her latest passion is working with shelter dogs. She splits her time living in Vashon and Spokane, Washington. yvonnehigginsleach.com
Shirley Hilton
has published or is forthcoming in Rattle, Briefly Write, The Edison Literary Review, and Delmarva Review among others. She has lived on both sides of the Mexican/U.S. border and frequently employs both Spanish and English in her work. She is currently completing edits on her first novel.
Mary Beth Hines
writes poetry, short fiction and non-fiction from her home in Massachusetts. Her prose has appeared in journals such as Literary Mama, Madcap Review, and Ruminate. Her poetry can be found in journals such as Crab Orchard Review, Eclectica, Nixes Mate Review, and SWWIM Every Day among others.
Glen Hogard
Doug Holder
is the founder of the Ibbetson Street Press. He is the Arts/Editor for The Somerville Times, and teaches writing at Endicott College in Beverly, MA. For over thirty years he has run poetry groups for psychiatric patients at McLean Hospital in Belmont, Ma. His latest book of verse is Last Night at the Wursthaus (Grey Sparrow Press).
Kenneth Holt
has published fiction in Thrice Fiction, American Fiction 16 Anthology, and TulipTree Publishing’s 2016 Stories That Need to be Told Anthology. A twenty-year veteran of the filmmaking industry, Holt lives in Los Angeles.
Mary Honaker
is the author of Becoming Persephone (Third Lung Press, 2019) and the chapbooks It Will Happen Like This (YesNo Press, 2015) and Gwen and the Big Nothing (The Orchard Street Press, 2020.) She holds an MFA from Lesley University. She lives in Beaver, West Virginia.
Amanda Hope
lives in eastern Massachusetts with her partner and cats. A graduate of Colgate University and Simmons College, she works as a librarian. Her chapbook, The Museum of Resentments, was published by Paper Nautilus in 2020. You can find her on Twitter at @AmandaHopePoet.
Richard Houff
has had poetry and prose published in Aldebaran, Brooklyn Review, Conduit, Louisiana Review, Midwest Quarterly, North American Review, Rattle, and many other fine magazines. His most recent collections are Night Watch and Other Hometown Favorites, from Black Cat Moon Press, and The Wonderful Farm and Other Gone Poems, from FlutterPress.
Maisie Houghton
Ann Howells
edited Illya’s Honey for eighteen years. Four chapbooks, two published as national contest winners. Three books: Under a Lone Star (Village Books), Cattlemen & Cadillacs (Dallas Poets Community Press), and a new collection, So Long As We Speak Their Names for spring release (Kelsay Books).