Burnside Review



 
Burnside Review Credits

Sid Miller

Editor and founder :: sid@burnsidereview.org

Sid Miller has fairly well covered the West, born in Hawaii, raised in California, educated in Arizona and settled in Portland. His poems have appeared widely. He has two chapbooks in print, and has two full-length collections appearing later this year, Nixon on the Piano (David Robert Books) and Dot-to-Dot, Oregon (Ooligan Press). Even though he loves fruit juices, he does not enjoy eating most fruits whole.

Bill Bogart

Co-editor :: bill@burnsidereview.org

Bill Bogart teaches developmental English to community college students in Portland, Oregon. His own poems have appeared in Field, Nimrod, Willowsprings and a few other journals. Before being asked to participate in the production of Burnside Review, his life was empty and/or meaningless.

Kyle Buckley

Fiction editor :: kyle@burnsidereview.org

Kyle Buckley writes Embodiment Fiction, lives in Portland, OR, and does work as a freelance copy editor. She graduated from Pomona College with a degree in English and Creative Writing, swore off all things literary, and acknowledges that, by agreeing to be involved with Burnside Review, she has gone back on her word, consented, for some reason, to reenter the fold.

Virginia Mix

Copy editor :: virginia@burnsidereview.org

Virginia Mix was born and raised in New York where she attended Columbia University. She currently lives in Portland, Oregon where she works as a Reading/Writing Curriculum Specialist at an educational non-profit, an Adjunct Professor in the English department at Portland State University, and a Copy Editor for Burnside Review. When she is not working, reading, or writing poetry, she spends her spare time taking long walks in the rain with her husband, Kevin, and her dog, a Siberian husky who sometimes answers to the name Mason.

Regina Godfrey

Graphic Artist

Carolyn Duncan, Liz Harlan-Ferlo, Jessica Johnson, Alisha Bruton, Zanni Schauffler, Brandy Mckenzie, Raul Alvarez and Jess Gulbranson.

Poetry readers