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Miriam Karmel is an American writer. Her first novel, Being Esther (2013), is one of only a few involving characters in their eighties. [1]Karmel's writing has appeared in numerous publications including Bellevue Literary Review, The Talking Stick, Pearl, Dust & Fire, Passager Books, Jewish Women's Literary Annual, and Water~Stone Review.
Auerbach has worked as a professor at Front Range Community College, the University of Colorado, Boulder, [1] and Sterling College in Vermont. [2]She has contributed to many literary publications, including New West, the Lodestar Quarterly, Gertrude Press, Van Gogh's Ear, XCP: Cross Cultural Poetics, Chelsea, and the Water~Stone Review.
Stone Canoe is a literary magazine published annually by The YMCA's Downtown Writers Center in Syracuse, New York ( "The DWC"). It publishes the work of writers and artists who are current or former residents of Upstate New York, which the journal's editors define as that portion of the state outside of New York City and Long Island.
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Mary Cappello is a writer and professor of English and Creative Writing at the University of Rhode Island. [1] She is the author of five books of literary nonfiction, and her essays and experimental prose have been published in The Georgia Review, [2] Salmagundi [3] and Cabinet Magazine. [4]
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Conjunctions is a biannual American literary journal founded in 1981 by Bradford Morrow, who continues to edit the journal.In 1991, Bard College became the journal's publisher.
These minerals are dissolved in the water and are deposited when the water loses its dissolved carbon dioxide through the mechanism of agitation, meaning it can no longer hold the minerals in solution. The flowstone forms when thin layers of these deposits build on each other, sometimes developing more rounded shapes as the deposit gets thicker.