Contributors  January 2009 | issue 397

ANDREW BOYD is an author, humorist, and twenty-year veteran of creative campaigns for social change. He’s written two books of “serious humor” — Daily Afflictions and Life’s Little Deconstruction Book (both W.W. Norton) — and is at work on two more: one about the irony of travel when there’s no “elsewhere” anymore, and another about the “odd challenges men face in a post-feminist world.” He lives in New York City with his wee laptop.

MEGAN BUCHANAN CHERRY lives with her family in Prescott, Arizona. She was married in October 2008 after twelve years of single motherhood. The bride wore a bracelet of hummingbird feathers.

THOMAS CLARK is a part-time photographer, writer, tennis player, and recluse. He lives in St. Albans, New York.

GLORIA BAKER FEINSTEIN lives in Kansas City, Missouri. She is the author of Kutuuka (Yellow Bird Press), a collection of photographs and drawings of and by the children at Saint Mary Kevin Orphanage in Uganda. Proceeds from sales of the book go to the orphanage through the Change the Truth Fund.

LESLEE GOODMAN lives in Santa Barbara, California, and is working with her husband to establish a sustainable farm on forty acres in north-central Washington, an endeavor she says the locals find highly entertaining.

JESSICA HALLIDAY lives in Spokane, Washington, and teaches composition at Gonzaga University. She’s written four novels, all of which are sitting in boxes in her closet.

IRA J. HAWKINS is a student at California College of the Arts and a preschool teacher. He lives in Oakland, California.

LOIS JUDSON is a writer who lives in Vermont with her boyfriend and her neurotic cat. She is amazed to discover that getting sober has left her with writer’s block, so she spends her time quilting, gardening, and admiring the mushrooms that grow in her yard.

GINA KELLY is a photographer living in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota.

JANICE KREITZ lives and takes photographs in Akron, Ohio.

ALISON LUTERMAN’s second book of poems, See How We Almost Fly, was just published by Pearl Editions. She lives, teaches, and throws parties with her husband in Oakland, California.

WILLIAM LYCHACK has a three-year-old son and a set of one-year-old twins, all of whom make sleep and showering feel like indulgent hobbies. He is the author of a novel, The Wasp Eater (Mariner Books), and a forthcoming collection of stories, The Architect of Flowers, and is a member of the mfa faculty at Lesley University in Massachusetts.

MICHELLE MASSON is a school nurse who loves music and takes photographs only because she cannot sing. She lives in Wilmington, North Carolina.

GARY MATSON lives in Sunnyside, New York. He has lived in every borough of New York City except Staten Island, though he was woken up there a number of mornings.

SY SAFRANSKY is editor and publisher of The Sun.

JANE SASSER grew up on a North Carolina farm and still expects late-night phone calls announcing that her cows are wandering loose (and perhaps they are, metaphorically speaking). She has a poetry chapbook, Recollecting the Snow (March Street Press), and lives in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.

SHARON SELIGMAN lives in Spicewood, Texas, with a menagerie of pets. Her photo essay about breast cancer, Bearing Witness, was sponsored by Blue Earth Alliance (www.blueearth.org).

CONNIE SPRINGER has three adopted children and would like someday to produce a coffee-table book on adult adoptees. She lives in Cincinnati, Ohio, but dreams of moving to a small city on the coast along with all her best friends.

SUSAN RAE TANNENBAUM is a wedding photographer who recently started making lampwork glass beads for love and money. She lives in New York City.

CARY TENNIS lives in San Francisco and writes a weekly advice column for Salon.com. In the 1980s he played in the rock band the Repeat Offenders. A collection of his columns, Since You Asked: The Best of Salon.com’s Cary Tennis, is available in stores and through his website.

KAREN TWEEDY-HOLMES works as an editor so that she doesn’t have to photograph lipstick or salad to pay the rent. She lives in New York City and devotes one day each weekend to a palomino quarter horse named Lucky, though she insists that she’s the lucky one.

JOHN WEHRHEIM’s photographs are featured in the documentary film Bhutan: Taking the Middle Path to Happiness. He lives in Lihue, Hawaii.

On the Cover

MORGAN CAUFIELD lives in a twenty-foot canvas yurt in Occidental, California. During the week she works with severely handicapped high-school students. The woman in this month’s cover photograph is her friend Longwillow, posing outdoors in a pink party dress (“very unlike her,” the photographer says) in the year she turned forty.

www.morgancaufielddesigns.com