Credits
Design and Linking Structure by Jason Nelson and Kris Blair
Edited by Ellen Berry, Kris Blair and Jason Nelson
John Bradley is the author of Love-In-Idleness: The Poetry of Roberto Zingarello (Word Works, 1989, winner of the Washington Prize), a book of persona poetry. He is the editor of Atomic Ghost: Poets Respond to the Nuclear Age (Coffee House Press, 1995), an international poetry anthology, and Learning to Glow: On Living in a Radioactive World (University of Arizona Press, forthcoming), a collection of essays on nuclear issues. In 1995, Bradley read at a ceremony in Hiroshima marking the fiftieth anniversary of the atomic bombing of that city, an event made even more memorable by the participation of Kurihara Sadako, one of Hiroshimašs most prominent hibakusha poets, Bradley teaches writing at Northern Illinois University.
Kent Johnsonšs publishing credits are discussed in the introduction, but we must reiterate that his work has appeared in most of the major literary journals, and has been praised and studied internationally. Currently he continues to write innovative works and challenge traditional literary understandings. He teaches Spanish and English at Highland Community College in Freeport, Illinois.
The Hyperauthorship replies in the interview are from Mikhail Epstein's HYPER-AUTHORSHIP: THE CASE OF ARAKI YASUSADA, which appears in this issue.