Outsider Ink


Terence Browne
 

Terence Browne is from Dublin, Ireland. Aged 48 and married with three children. He is a late convert to poetry. This is his first publication. The Chopin Foundation in Warsaw will be publishing a suite of his poems based on Chopin's Music this spring.

He fell for Hazel Lavery (1880-1935) and her husband's stunning art. Together, the pair changed the course of Anglo-Irish history; their London studio was the very meeting place of the British and Irish delegations in the successful peace talks of late 1921. The Lavery's high art became a refuge and inspiration for many of their contemporaries. Apart from the interest of collectors now sadly, they are near to forgotten. One thing led to another. The verse wrote itself.

Read his Poetry inspired by Singer Sargent and Lavery
Email Terence Browne at: vico@indigo.ie

 

Christina Conrad
Regarded by many art historians and critics as New Zealand's most exciting and original artist, and its leading exponent of "art brut", Christina Conrad has exhibited in major galleries in New Zealand, Australia, the UK and the United States, including the 1999 Outsider Arts Fair.

Visit her Website for further information and to view more of her extensive collection of artwork and poetry.

Visit her Poetry and Artwork
Email Christina Conrad at: christina@conrad.every1.net

 

Jason DeBoer

Jason DeBoer's work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Barcelona Review, Libido, The Wisconsin Review, CrossConnect, The Review of Contemporary Fiction, American Atheist, Linnaean Street, Suspect Thoughts, Exquisite Corpse, and The Absinthe Literary Review. He is the managing editor of Eighteenth-Century Studies, an academic journal based at Northwestern University, and at the moment he is working on Stupor, his debut novel.

"Execution of the Sun" has also appeared in The Wisconsin Review, Exquisite Corpse, BeeHive, and CrossConnect

Read The Execution of the Sun
Email Jason DeBoer at: tremblingsun@yahoo.com

 

Michael Hansen

Born in SF in the 50s into a train wreck of a family, the subject under discussion came up in the East Bay of the 70s and then traveled widely, misspending his youth careening from one terror-in-retrospect abortive learning experience to the next. Cab driver, bouncer, kick boxer, marine: all the stereotypical writer's breeding grounds apply here. Has seen most of the continents, and is not nearly as dysfunctional as his writing might seem to imply.

Read Cherry
email Michael Hansen at: munchkin@northcoast.com

 

Coral Hull

Coral Hull was born in Paddington, New South Wales, Australia. She is a full-time writer specializing in poetry, experimental prose fiction, scripts and literary articles. Her work has been published extensively in literary magazines in the USA, Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom. Coral is an animal rights advocate and the Editor of Thylazine, an online literary magazine featuring articles, interviews, photographs and the recent work of Australian artists and writers working in the areas of landscape and animals. She has her Doctorate in Creative Arts from the Univeristy of Wollongong.

Her published books are: In The Dog Box Of Summer in Hot Collation, William's Mongrels in The Wild Life, Broken Land, How Do Detectives Make Love?, Remote, and Zoo (with John Kinsella).

Read Guilty
Email Coral Hull at: coralhull@thylazine.org

 

 

Greggory Moore

Greggory lived in Long Beach, CA and is something of a stereotypical struggling artiste. He favors authors Nabokov, Borges, and Stoppard. His first novella, "Neck," is available for purchase on Barnes & Noble's website.

Read K.K.
email Greggory Moore at: greggory_x@yahoo.com

 

Greg Wharton

Greg is the founder/editor of Suspect Thoughts: A Journal of Subversive Writing. He is also a Development Manager for a nonprofit arts education organization by day, husband of 18 years to an extraordinary man, father to two cats, avid antique toy collector, tennis junkie, and writer. He lives in Chicago and travels, usually in his mind, throughout North America and the world.

His short fiction, review, and nonfiction writing has been featured in Black Sheets, Blue Food, Mach, and spoonfed:amerika; online at 3AM Publishing, Bonetree, Clean Sheets, The Church-Wellesley Review, Cyber (Exquisite) Corpse, Gothic.net, Mind Caviar, Outsider Ink, Redsine, Scarlet Letters, Strange Horizons, and Venus or Vixen?; and in the anthology Quickies 2: Short Short Fiction on Gay Male Desire.

Read Ben and the Countess
Visit Suspect Thoughts, A Journal of Subversive Writing
Email Greg Wharton at: gregw@suspectthoughts.com

 

 

Sean Meriwether - Editor

In addition to being editor of Outsider Ink, he has been publishing his own short fiction on the internet and literary magazines. His short story, "A Date With John," was anthologized in Best Gay Erotica 2001. He has appared in print in Excess Compassion and is online in Suspect Thoughts.

Sean is currently working on several projects including a novel about a young gay man growing up in rural Pennsylvania, a sample of which is on Outsider Ink, and a collection of unflinching short stories entitled "Invisible Children."

He can also be found working with his partner, Jack Slomovits, on BlowSquish.com, an internet design company.

Visit his gallery at: seanmeriwether.com
email Sean Meriwether



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