Chris
August has
been a member of four national poetry slam teams, including thetenth place
2005 DC/Baltimore team, and was ranked seventh in the world at the 2005
Individual World Poetry Slam. He is a co-host of Slamicide!,
Baltimore’s nationally certified poetry slam, and his performances
have been released in audio and video form. He performs widely throughout
the country, most recently at the Bowery Poetry Club in New York City.

Jimmy Santiago Baca, born in New Mexico of Chicano and Apache descent, was sentenced to five years in a maximum security prison at the age of twenty-one; there he learned to read and write and found his passion for poetry. Baca’s many books include The Importance of a Piece of Paper (Grove/Atlantic), Winter Poems Along the Rio Grande (New Directions), A Place to Stand, Healing Earthquakes, Black Mesa Poems, and Immigrants in Our Own Land. He is the winner of the Pushcart Prize, the American Book Award from the Before Columbus Foundation, the National Poetry Award, the International Hispanic Heritage Award, and, for his memoir A Place To Stand, the prestigious International Award.
Dennis Brutus is a South African poet who was banned imprisoned on Robben Island with Nelson Mandela and 1,000 others. He is the author of 12 books of poetry, including Poetry and Protest: A Dennis Brutus Reader and Still the Sirens. He is Honorary Professor at the Centre for Civil Society, University of Kwazulu-Natal, in Durban, South Africa and Professor Emeritus at the University of Pittsburgh. Brutus was the recipient of the Langston Hughes Award in 1987 (the first non-African American to receive that award), and the first Paul Robeson Award in 1989 for "artistic excellence, political consciousness and integrity".

Princess of Controversy is an actress,
rapper, singer, poet, public speaker and activist. She is an organizer
for Critical Resistance, an organization that provides community alternatives
to incarceration; a volunteer teacher for the Latin American Youth Center
Upward Bound Program and the Young Women’s Drumming Empowerment
Project; a member of Blackout Arts Collective, a collective of artists
that use art as a mechanism for activism, especially for outreach with
youth; and a member of DC Guerilla Poets Insurgency, an informal cultural
collective of artists, activists and organizations seeking to expose the
political propaganda of today’s society.
Kenneth
Carroll is a native Washingtonian. He is the author of a
book of poems, So What! For the White Dude Who Said This Ain't Poetry
(The Bunny and the Crocodile Press, 1997). Carroll is Director of DC WritersCorps,
an arts and social service program founded by the NEA and AmeriCorps that
was honored in 1999 by the national Coming Up Taller Awards. He is the
past president of the African American Writers Guild, served on the board
of directors of the Poetry Committee of Greater Washington, and was a
founding member of the 8Rock Writers Collective.

Grace Cavalieri is the author of several books, and produced plays. She’s produced “The Poet and the Poem” from the Library of Congress on public radio, ( now in its 31st year.) Among honors, Grace holds playwriting awards, the Allen Ginsberg Award for Poetry, A Paterson Prize for Poetry, the Pen-Syndicated Fiction Award, the Bordighera Poetry Award, the Folger’s inaugural “Columbia Award,” and CPB’s Silver Medal. Her book What I Would do For Love (Poems in the Voice of Mary Wollstonecraft, 1759-1797) is the basis for her new play, “Hyena in Petticoats.” Among production awards, the play “Quilting the Sun” was awarded the key to the city of Greenville (2007.) She is the Book Review Editor for The Montserrat Review, and a poetry columnist for MiPOradio. Her new book of poems is ANNA NICOLE (2008, A Menendez Publication). http://www.gracecavalieri.com/.
Lucille
Clifton’s many books of poetry include Blessing the
Boats: New and Selected Poems 1988-2000 (BOA Editions, 2000), which
won the National Book Award; The Terrible Stories (1995), nominated
for the National Book Award; and Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir 1969-1980
(1987), nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. Her honors include a Lannan
Literary Award and two fellowships from the National Endowment for the
Arts. She is a Chancellor of The Academy of American Poets. She has served
as Poet Laureate for the State of Maryland and is currently Distinguished
Professor of Humanities at St. Mary's College.
Joel
Dias Porter (aka DJ Renegade) was the 1998 and 1999 National
Haiku Slam Champion. His poems have been published in Time Magazine,
The Washington Post, Callaloo, Antioch Review, and the anthologies Meow:
Spoken Word from the Black Cat, Role Call, Def Poetry Jam, 360 Degrees
of Black Poetry, Slam (The Book), Revival: Spoken Word from Lollapallooza,
Poetry Nation, Beyond the Frontier, Catch a Fire, and The Black
Rooster Social Inn, which he also edited. In 1995, he received the
Furious Flower "Emerging Poet Award" from James Madison University.
He has performed on the Today Show, in a commercial for Legal Jeans, in
the documentaries Voices Against Violence and SlamNation, on BET's Teen
Summit and By the Book, and in the feature film Slam.
Mark
Doty, the only American poet to have won Great Britain's
T. S. Eliot Prize, is the author of six books of poems, including My
Alexandria (1993), which received both the Los Angeles Times Book
Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award. He has also published
Atlantis (1995), Sweet Machine (1998) and Source
(2001), and School of the Arts (2005), as well as the memoirs
Heaven's Coast (1996) and Firebird (1999). Among his
many other awards are two NEA fellowships, Guggenheim and Rockefeller
Foundation Fellowships, a Lila Wallace/Readers Digest Award, and the Witter
Bynner Prize. Doty teaches in the graduate program the University of Houston,
and is a frequent guest at Columbia University, Hunter College, and NYU.
He lives in Houston and in New York City.
Martín
Espada has published a dozen books in all as a poet, essayist,
editor and translator. His eighth collection of poems, The Republic
of Poetry, was published by Norton in October, 2006. His last book,
Alabanza: New and Selected Poems, 1982-2002 (Norton, 2003), received
the Paterson Award for Sustained Literary Achievement and was named an
American Library Association Notable Book of the Year. An earlier collection,
Imagine the Angels of Bread (Norton, 1996), won an American Book Award
and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. He has
received numerous awards and fellowships, including a Guggenheim Fellowship,
the Robert Creeley Award, the Antonia Pantoja Award, the PEN/Revson Fellowship
and two NEA Fellowships. Espada is a professor in the Department of English
at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, where he teaches creative
writing and the work of Pablo Neruda.
Known
as a “poet of witness,” Carolyn
Forché is the author of four books of poetry. Her first
poetry collection, Gathering The Tribes (Yale University Press,
1976), won the Yale Series of Younger Poets Award from the Yale University
Press. Her second book, The Country Between Us (Harper and Row,
1982), received the Poetry Society of America's Alice Fay di Castagnola
Award, and was also the Lamont Selection of the Academy of American Poets.
Forché’s anthology, Against Forgetting: Twentieth Century Poetry of
Witness, was published by W.W. Norton & Co. in 1993, and in 1994,
her third book of poetry, The Angel of History (HarperCollins,
Publishers), was chosen for The Los Angeles Times Book Award. Forché has
held three NEA fellowships, and a Lannan Foundation Literary Fellowship.
Forché teaches at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs.
Brian
Gilmore is a poet, writer, and public interest lawyer who
currently teaches in the Clinical Law Program at the Howard University
School of Law in Washington, D.C. He is the author of two collections
of poetry, elvis presley is alive and well and living in harlem
(Third World Press of Chicago, 1993) and Jungle Nights and Soda Fountain
Rags: Poem for Duke Ellington (Karibu Books, 2000). Gilmore
has been widely published in poetry anthologies and journals, and he is
a regular columnist with the Progressive Media Project and a regular contributor
to The Progressive Magazine. His poetry, essays, reviews, and other writings
have appeared in The Washington Review, The Apple Valley Review, The
Red Brick Review, The Washington Post, The Baltimore Sun, The Detroit
Free Press, The Charlotte Observer, The Buffalo News, The Rochester Democrat,
The Nation, The Utne Reader, Jazz Times, Jazz and Blues, American Songwriter
Magazine, and many other national and local publications. Born
and raised in Washington, D.C., and a graduate of Archbishop Carroll High
School, he currently resides in Takoma Park, Maryland, with his family.
Sam
Hamill is the author of fifteen volumes of original poetry, including Measured by Stone (Curbstone Press, 2007), and Almost Paradise: Selected Poems & Translations (Shambhala, 2005), and four volumes of essays including Avocations: On Poetry and Poets (Red Hen Press, 2007) and A Poet's Work (Carnegie-Mellon University Press). He has translated extensively from classical Chinese and Japanese and has been the recipient of many awards, including fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation, the Stanley Lindberg Lifetime Achievement Award for Editing, and the Washington Poets Association Lifetime Achievement Award. He is Founding Editor of Copper Canyon Press and was Editor there from 1972 through 2004. In 2003 he founded Poets Against War, compiling the largest single-theme anthology in history, and editing a best-selling selection, Poets Against the War (Nation Books, 2003).
Galway
Kinnell was born in Providence, Rhode Island, in 1927. His
volumes of poetry include A New Selected Poems (Houghton Mifflin,
2000), a finalist for the National Book Award; Imperfect Thirst (1996);
When One Has Lived a Long Time Alone (1990); Selected Poems
(1980), for which he received both the Pulitzer Prize and the National
Book Award; Mortal Acts, Mortal Words (1980); The Book of
Nightmares (1971); Body Rags (1968); Flower Herding
on Mount Monadnock (1964); and What a Kingdom It Was (1960).
He has also published translations of works by Yves Bonnefroy, Yvanne
Goll, and François Villon, and, this year, Rainer Maria Rilke. Kinnell
divides his time between Vermont and New York City, where he is the Erich
Maria Remarque Professor of Creative Writing at New York University. He
is a Chancellor of The Academy of American Poets.
Stephen
Kuusisto is the author of Only Bread, Only Light,
a collection of poems from Copper Canyon Press, and of the memoirs Planet
of the Blind and Eavesdropping. He holds a dual appointment
at the University of Iowa in English where he teaches courses in creative
nonfiction and serves as a public humanities scholar in the U of Iowa’s
College of Medicine. He speaks widely on diversity, disability, education,
and public policy. His essays and poems have appeared in numerous anthologies
and literary magazines including Harper’s, The New York Times
Magazine, Poetry, and Partisan Review. He is currently working
on a collection of prose poems for Copper Canyon Press entitled Mornings
With Borges as well as a collection of political poems about disability.
Semezdin
Mehmedinovic was born in Tuzla, Bosnia in 1960 and is the
author of four books, including Sarajevo Blues, composed of stories
and poems written during the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Published in 1992
in Ljubljana, the book was the first in the Biblioteka egzilabc series, which provided a forum for Bosnian writers and translators under
siege or living in exile. In 1993 he co-wrote and co-directed “Mizaldo,”
one of the first Bosnian films shot during the war. The film won the first
prize at the Mediterranean Festival in Rome the following year. He, his
wife, and their child left Bosnia and came to the U.S. as political refugees
in 1996.
E.
Ethelbert Miller is the author
of several collections of poetry, most recently How We Sleep On The
Nights We Don't Make Love (Curbstone Press, 2004). His memoir, Fathering
Words: The Making of An African American Writer (St. Martin's Press,
2000), was featured in the DC WE READ program. He is the editor of several
anthologies, including Beyond the Frontier: African American Poetry
for the 21st Century (Black Classic Press, 2002) and In Search
of Color Everywhere (Stewart, Tabori & Chang, 1995). His awards include
the Columbia Merit Award and the O.B. Hardison Jr. Poetry Prize. Miller
is director of the African American Resource Center at Howard University.
Naomi
Shihab Nye is the author of
numerous books of poems, including You & Yours (BOA Editions,
2005), 19 Varieties of Gazelle: Poems of the Middle East (2002),
Fuel (1998), and Red Suitcase (1994). She has twice
traveled to the Middle East and Asia for the United States Information
Agency promoting international goodwill through the arts. Nye has received
awards from the Texas Institute of Letters, the Carity Randall prize,
and the International Poetry Forum. Her poems and short stories have appeared
in various journals and reviews throughout North America, Europe, and
the Middle and Far East. Nye has also written books for children, and
has edited several anthologies of prose.
Sharon
Olds is the Erich Maria Remarque professor and a permanent
faculty member in the Creative Writing Program at New York University
(NYU). Her first book of poetry, Satan Says, received the San
Francisco Poetry Center Award. Her second book, The Dead and
the Living, was both the Lamont Poetry Selection for 1983 and the
winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award. She is also the
author of The Gold Cell (1987), The Father (1992), The
Wellspring (1996), Blood, Tin, Straw (1999) and The
Unswept Room (2002). Her latest collection is Strike Sparks:
Selected Poems, 1980-2002 (2004). She received a Lila Wallace-Readers’
Digest Grant in 1993, part of which was designated for the NYU workshop
program at Goldwater Hospital on Roosevelt Island. In 1997, she received
the Harriet Monroe Poetry Award. From 1998-2000 she was the New York State
Poet Laureate.

Alix Olson is a performance poet and social activist. Her innumerable stage, broadcast, radio and print appearances include twice headlining HBO's “Def Poetry Jam” (Russell Simmons), and an inclusion in Utne Magazine's InRadio compilation. She has received a New York Foundation for the Arts fellowship and a Barbara Deming grant, as well as being voted 2004 OutMusician of the Year (OutMusic). She has headlined international poetry festivals in Portugal, the Netherlands, England, and Australia. She is the subject of “LEFT LANE - on the road with FOLK POET ALIX OLSON,” a film by Samantha Farinella.
Poet
and Critic Alicia Suskin Ostriker's
collection The Little Space: Poems Selected and New, 1968-1998
(University of Pittsburgh Press, 1998) was a finalist for the Lenore Marshall
Poetry Prize. Her other books of poetry include The Crack in Everything
(1996), a National Book Award finalist that won both the Paterson Poetry
Award and the San Francisco State Poetry Center Award; and The Imaginary
Lover (1986), winner of the William Carlos Williams Award of the
Poetry Society of America. She has written several critical works, including
Dancing at the Devil's Party: Essays on Poetry, Politics and the Erotic
(2000), The Nakedness of the Fathers: Biblical Visions and Revisions
(1994), and Stealing the Language: The Emergence of Women's Poetry
in America (1986).
Ishle
Yi Park is the Poet Laureate of Queens, New York. She has
performed her unique blend of poetry & song across the United States,
Cuba, New Zealand, Singapore, and Korea. Her first book, The Temperature
of This Water, is the winner of three literary awards including the
PEN America Beyond Margins Award for Outstanding Writers of Color. Her
CD, Work is Love, includes tracks with Korean traditional drums,
Spanish guitar, beatboxing, and music produced by Japan's critically acclaimed
DJ Honda. Park has taught creative writing in high schools, colleges,
prisons, and community centers across the country and has opened for artists
such as KRS-One, Ben Harper, De La Soul, and Saul Williams.
Sonia
Sanchez is the author of more than a dozen books of poetry,
including Homegirls and Handgrenades (White Pine Press, 2007),
Shake Loose My Skin: New and Selected Poems (1999); Like
the Singing Coming Off the Drums: Love Poems (1998); and Does
your house have lions? (1995), which was nominated for both the NAACP
Image and National Book Critics Circle Award. Among the many honors she
has received are the Community Service Award from the National Black Caucus
of State Legislators, the Lucretia Mott Award, the Outstanding Arts Award
from the Pennsylvania Coalition of 100 Black Women, the Peace and Freedom
Award from Women International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), a
National Endowment for the Arts Award, and a Pew Fellowship in the Arts.
She was the first Presidential Fellow at Temple University, where she
began teaching in 1977, and held the Laura Carnell Chair in English there
until her retirement in 1999.
Patricia
Smith, author, poet, teacher, performer, is the author of
four books of poetry— Teahouse of the Almighty (Coffee House
Press, 2006), a 2005 National Poetry Series selection, winner of the 2007
Paterson Poetry Prize and finalist for the 2007 Hurston/Wright Legacy
Award; Close to Death (1993), Big Towns, Big Talk (1992),
and Life According to Motown (1991). In addition, she has authored
the history "Africans In America" and the children's book Janna
and the Kings. Her next book, Blood Dazzler, a book of poems
chronicling the tragedies of Hurricane Katrina, will be published in 2008
by Coffee House. Smith's work has appeared in Poetry, The Paris Review,
TriQuarterly and many other journals. She is a Pushcart Prize winner,
a Cave Canem faculty member, and a four-time individual champion of the
National Poetry Slam, the most successful poet in the competition's history.
Jeffrey Thomson’s fourth collection of poems, Birdwatching in Wartime, is forthcoming from Carnegie Mellon University Press in 2009. Also forthcoming is Many Ways to Dig a Tunnel, a collection of translations from the Spanish of Cuban poet Juan Carlos Flores and From the Fishouse: An Anthology of Poems that Sing, Rhyme, Resound, Syncopate, Alliterate, and Just Plain Sound Great co-edited with Camille Dungy and Matt O’Donnell from Persea Books. An assistant professor of creative writing at the University of Maine Farmington, he has a recent chapbook, The Celestial Emporium of Benevolent Knowledge, from RopeWalk Press. His website is www.jeffreythomson.com
Susan
Tichy is the author of Bone Pagoda, A Smell
of Burning Starts the Day, and The Hands in Exile, a National
Poetry Series volume. Her poems and mixed-genre works have appeared in
the U.S. and Britain, and have been recognized by awards from the Eugene
Kayden Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. She teaches
in the Graduate Writing Program at George Mason University and also serves
as Poetry Editor of Practice: New Writing + Art. When not teaching,
she lives in a ghost town in the southern Colorado Rockies.

Of Russian/Czech/Siberian descent, Pamela Uschuk holds an M.F.A. from the University of Montana. She is the author of three books of poems, Finding Peaches in the Desert, One-Legged Dancer, and Scattered Risks. Her literary prizes include the Tucson/Pima Writing Award, the Struga International Poetry Prize, the Dorothy Daniels Writing Award from The National League of American PEN Women, IRIS Poetry Prize (University of Virginia) and the ASCENT Award (University of Illinois). Her work has been translated into Albanian, Spanish, French, Swedish, German and Czech. She is Director of the Salem College Center for Women Writers.

Belle Waring is the author of two poetry collections: Refuge
(University of Pittsburgh Press, 1990), which won the Associated Writing
Programs’ Award in 1989 and was cited by Publishers Weekly as one
of the best books of 1990; and Dark Blonde (Sarabande Books,
1997), which won the Larry Levis Prize in 1998. She has worked as a neonatal
nurse in Washington, DC’s hospitals.