Maurice Carlos Ruffin is a charter member of the Melanated Writers Collective and the Peauxdunque Writers’ Alliance, a multi-genre writers group formed under the auspices of the Pirate’s Alley Faulkner Society’s Words & Music Writers’ Alliance.
Ron Rash, is a distinguished American poet, short story writer, and novelist, was born on William Faulkner’s birthday, September 25, in 1953 in Chester, SC .
Uriel Quesada, Ph.D. is the director of the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies at Loyola University.
Cassie Pruyn is a New Orleans poet, originally hailing from Portland, Maine. Her poem, TwoPlaces, was second runner-up in the 2013 William Faulkner–William Wisdom Creative Writing Competition, and one of her prose poems was a finalist for the 2013 Indiana Review1/2K Prize.
Marylin Mell, Ph.D., coordinator of the Department of English at Dillard University in New Orleans, teaches, film, poetry, novel, essay, literary criticism, and literature of major authors.
J.Ed. Marston, born in small town Alabama and a graduate of Spring Hill College in Mobile, has worked as a public defense paralegal, a small town newspaper reporter, the manager of a non-profit serving homeless people, and currently leads communications for the Chattanooga Area Chamber of Commerce.
Gary Krist wrote three novels—Bad Chemistry, Chaos Theory, and Extravagance—and two short story collections—The Garden State and Bone by Bone—before turning to narrative nonfiction before turning to narrative nonfiction with The White Cascade and his latest book, the New York Times Bestseller, City of Scoundrels, the city in this case being Chicago, that most American of American cities.
Rodger Kamenetz, poet, essayist, non-fiction author, teacher, and popular lecturer, long associated with Words & Music and the Faulkner Society, has a wonderful new collection of poetry out,
To Die Next to You.
Rosemary James has had a dual career in communications and interior design. As a journalist, she started her career writing features as a high school student writing for the Pulitzer Prize wining weekly, the Myrtle Beach Sun, and then for The Charleston News & Courier/Evening Post in her hometown.
W. Kenneth Holditch, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Literature and Writing at the University of New Orleans, is a co-founder of The Pirate’s Alley Faulkner Society and was one of the founders of the Tennessee Williams Festivals in New Orleans, Clarksdale, Mississippi, and Columbus, MS.