Featured Readers
Jehanne Dubrow is the author of six poetry collections, including most recently The Arranged Marriage and Red Army Red and is the co-editor of Still Life with Poem and The Book of Scented Things. Her poetry, creative nonfiction, and book reviews have appeared in Southern Review, The New England Review, Pleiades, and Copper Nickel. She is an Associate Professor of creative writing at the University of North Texas. Moving between the languages of love and war, Jehanne Dubrow’s latest book offers valuable testimony to the experiences of military wives. Frequently employing rhyme, meter, and traditional forms, these poems examine what it means to be both a military spouse and an academic, straddling two communities that speak in very different and often conflicting terms.
Emily Jungmin Yoon is the author of A Cruelty Special to Our Species, (Ecco|HarperCollins 2018), which was released in Korean as 우리 종족의 특별한 잔인함 (trans. Han Yujoo; Yolimwon 2020), and Ordinary Misfortunes, the 2017 winner of the Sunken Garden Chapbook Prize by Tupelo Press and selected by Maggie Smith. Also a translator, she has published Against Healing: Nine Korean Poets (Tilted Axis, 2019), a chapbook of poems by Korean women writers. Yoon is represented by Jin Auh at the Wylie Agency.
Yoon was born in Busan, Republic of Korea, and since the age of 10, she has lived in Victoria, BC, Philadelphia, and New York, and currently splits her time between Seoul and Honolulu. She received her BA in English and Communication at the University of Pennsylvania and MFA in Creative Writing – Poetry at New York University, where she served as an Award Editor for the Washington Square Review and received a Starworks Fellowship.
She has also accepted awards and fellowships from Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, Poetry Foundation, Devil’s Kitchen Reading Awards, Ploughshares’ Emerging Writer’s Contest, and elsewhere.
Individual works have appeared in The New Yorker, POETRY, The New York Times Magazine, The Paris Review, Korean Literature Now, and elsewhere.
She currently serves as the Poetry Editor for The Margins, the literary magazine of the Asian American Writers’ Workshop, and is a PhD candidate in Korean literature in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago.
