Poet Biographies: H

Johanna Haas lives in Illinois. Her poetry has appeared in Do Geese See God, *82 Review, and The Journal of Expressive Writing. When not writing, you can find her playing with plants and animals or tying a long string into many knots. You can find her at johannahaas.com and writing at substack.johannahaas.com.
Dwarf Stars 2025
Star*Line 47.3

Alan Haider
Star*Line 35.3

Tyler Hagemann was born and raised in Lindsay, Ontario, but has spent the last decade in Toronto. He is a recent graduate of a psychology program, and holds a BFA in theatre.
Rhysling Anthology third place in 2020

Joseph Halden
Rhysling Anthology 2024
Star*Line 46.1

Joe William Haldeman is an American science fiction author. He is best known for his novel The Forever War. That novel and other works, including The Hemingway Hoax and Forever Peace, have won science-fiction awards, including the Hugo Award, Nebula Award, and Rhysling Award.
Dwarf Stars 2023
Rhysling Anthology first place in1984, 1990, first place in 1991, runner-up in 1995, first place in 2001, second place in 2006, second place in 2007, 2013

John A. Haliburton
Star*Line 1.4

Bryan Hall
Star*Line 33.4

James Hall’s poetry collection Prairie Roots will be released this year by Shanti Arts Publishing. His writing has appeared in Hobo Camp Review, Utopia, Deep Overstock, and others. He is a writer and physician with interests in cider craft, cross country skiing and dire portents.
Star*Line 47.2

Hazel Hall is a well published Australian poet and musicologist. Her latest collections are Step by Step, with Angie Egan (Picaro Poets 2019), Moonlight Over the Siding (Interactive Press 2019), You are Her Words, with Canadian artist Karen Bailey (HD Press 2019), and Severed Web with Australian artist Deborah Faeyrglenn (Picaro Poets 2020).
Dwarf Stars 2020

Jennifer Hambrick is a Pushcart Prize nominee, the First Place winner of the 2018 Haiku Society of America Haibun Award Competition, and the author of the poetry collection Unscathed (NightBallet Press) which was nominated for the Ohioana Book Award. She is widely published, with hundreds of poems in literary journals, including The American Journal of Poetry, Chiron Review, Santa Clara Review, Main Street Rag, POEM, San Pedro River Review, Third Wednesday, Mad River Review, Frogpond, Modern Haiku, and major Japanese newspapers The Asahi Shimbun and The Mainichi, among others. Jennifer Hambrick has received numerous awards and other recognitions for her poetry, including from Tokyo’s NHK World TV, in the Jane Reichhold Haiga Competition, the Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival International Haiku Invitational, the Golden Haiku Competition (Washington, D.C.), the Kaji Aso Studio Haiku Competition (Boston), the Ohio Poetry Association, and others. A classical musician and public radio broadcaster and web producer, Jennifer Hambrick lives in Columbus, Ohio. Her blog, Inner Voices, is at jenniferhambrick.com.
Dwarf Stars 2019

Elissa L. A. Hamilton
Rhysling Anthology 1982, 1983
Star*Line 4.2, 4.3, 4.5, 4.6, 5.2, 5.5, 5.6, 6.1

Fritz Hamilton
Star*Line 5.1

Justin Hamm
Star*Line 36.2

Adam Hammer
Rhysling Anthology 1979

Larry Hammer
Rhysling Anthology 2005, 2010

Jenna Hanchey has been called a "badass fairy," and she attempts to live up to the title. A professor of critical/cultural studies at Arizona State University, her research looks at how speculative fiction can imagine decolonization and bring it into being. Her own writing tries to support this project of creating better futures for us all. Her BSFA award-nominated work appears in Nature, Radon, Orion's Belt, and Little Blue Marble. She cohosts the podcast "Griots & Galaxies" on African speculative fiction. Follow her adventures at jennahanchey.com.
Star*Line 47.3, 48.1

Amy R. Handler
Star*Line 31.5

Todd Hanks
Dwarf Stars 2006
Rhysling Anthology 2006, 2009
Star*Line 33.1

Laura Hanna
Star*Line 39.3

Christopher Hansen
Star*Line 37.3

Jon Hansen is a writer, former librarian, and occasional blood donor. His poetry has appeared in such places as Strange Horizons, Abyss & Apex, and Flytrap. He currently lives in the Boston area with his wife, son, and three pushy cats.
Star*Line 44.2

Terry Hansen
Star*Line 2.2

Michael H. Hanson has written six collections of poetry: Autumn Blush and Jubilant Whispers (Racket River Publishing), Dark Parchments and When the Night Owl Screams (MoonDream Press), and Android Girl And Other Sentient Publications and Quarantine World: Trapped in The Coronaverse (Three Ravens Publishing). His work regularly appears in the annual Rhysling Anthology and the HWA Poetry Showcase. He currently lives in Colorado.
Rhysling Anthology 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021

R. S. Harding
Star*Line 4.6

Oz Hardwick is a European poet, photographer, musician, and academic, whose publications include Learning to Have Lost (IPSI/Recent Work, 2018) which won the 2019 Rubery International Book Award for poetry, and most recently the prose poetry sequence Wolf Planet (Hedgehog, 2020). Oz is Professor of Creative Writing at Leeds Trinity University (UK).
Star*Line 45.3

K. S. Hardy
Dwarf Stars 2011
Rhysling Anthology 2008

J. D. Harlock is a Syrian Lebanese Palestinian writer and editor based in Beirut. In addition to his posts at Wasifiri, as an editor-at-large, and at Solarpunk Magazine, as a poetry editor,his writing has been featured in Strange Horizons, Star*Line, and the SFWA Blog. You can always find him on Twitter and Instagram posting updates on his latest projects.
Rhysling Anthology 2024
Star*Line 45.4

C.R. Harper is a writer/editor of formal and speculative micropoetry. Representative works have appeared online, in print, and inside a gumball machine in Vancouver.
Dwarf Stars 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2023
Star*Line 38.1, 38.2, 38.4, 39.1, 39.2, 39.4, 40.2, 40.4, 42.2

Jo Ann Harper
Rhysling Anthology 1978

Jasmine Harrell
Star*Line 46.3

David M. Harris
Star*Line 36.1

Nin Harris
Rhysling Anthology 2016

Ellen Harrold is an artist and writer. She uses painting, drawing, text, and textiles to explore physics and ecology through creative abstraction. She has recently published art in The Storms Journal, An Áitiúil, and Orion. She has published poetry in English and Irish in magazines such as Shearsman, Causeway / Cabhsair, and Skylight 47. She has published her first book ‘Aesthetics and Conventions of Medical Art.' with Boom Graduates. She can be found on Instagram @ellenharroldart
Star*Line 47.2

Mitchell Hart
Star*Line 34.4

Graham Hartill
Rhysling Anthology 1995

J. C. Hartley
Rhysling Anthology 1993

L. R. Harvey
Rhysling Anthology 2020

Michele L. Harvey
Dwarf Stars 2010

Alex Harwood wants to be a Renaissance Man when he grows up. That or a disembodied psionic entity. A guitarist, vocalist, writer, gamer, and eternal nerd, he plans to write more—if he can fix those runtime errors in his motivation. His character arc holds 360 degrees, including a BA in English from Ursinus College and an MA in Communication Arts from UW–Madison, apparently. He’s fond of fantasy, metafiction, and that odd combination of pretentiousness and self-deprecation that comes from spending too much time being introspective. Alex is proud and honored to have been a part of Star*Line, and lives out on the northleft coast with his two pets, Depression and Anxiety—but if anyone asks, you’ve never heard of him.
Star*Line 39.1, 39.2, 39.3

K. L. Hasell
Dwarf Stars 2015

Miriam Hasert
Star*Line 5.1, 6.2

Lola Haskins
Rhysling Anthology 2015

Brittany Hause’s speculative poetry has appeared in Asimov's Science Fiction, Kaleidotrope, and many other places, and their Spanish-to-English verse translations can be read in Better Than Starbucks, Star*Line, and elsewhere.
Dwarf Stars 2019, 2020
Rhysling Anthology 2022, 2023
Star*Line 41.1, 41.3, 42.1, 44.3, 45.1, 45.2, 45.4

Lee S. Hawke writes misshapen and thought-provoking fiction from Australia.
Rhysling Anthology 2017
Star*Line 39.1

John Hawkhead is an award-winning writer from the South West of England who has published over 1400 haiku/senryu all over the world. His book Bone Moon placed third in the 2023 Haiku Society of America Merit Book Awards and follows his 2016 publication Small Shadows – both from Alba Publishing.
Dwarf Stars 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2025
Star*Line 45.3

Tia Haynes
Dwarf Stars 2022

Clark Hays
Rhysling Anthology 1995, 2003

Becky Hayworth
Star*Line 6.2

Marilyn Hazelton
Dwarf Stars 2008

Kevin Heaton
Star*Line 34.3

Rose Menyon Heflin, originally from rural, southern Kentucky, is a writer and artist living in Madison, Wisconsin. Her work has appeared in numerous journals spanning four continents, and her poetry won a Merit Award from Arts for All Wisconsin. One of her poems was choreographed and performed by a local dance troupe, and she had a creative nonfiction piece featured in the Chazen Museum of Art’s Companion Species exhibit. Her recent and forthcoming publications include Brown Bag Online, Defunkt Magazine, Fauxmoir, Feral, La Raíz Magazine, Poemeleon, sPARKLE & bLINK, SPLASH!, Tangled Locks Journal’s MoonBites, and W.E.I.R.D.
Star*Line 45.1

Robin Helweg-Larsen’s poems, largely formal, are widely published in the US, UK and Canada. Some of the best are in The HyperTexts. He is Series Editor for Sampson Low's "Potcake Chapbooks—Form in Formless Times," and blogs at formalverse.com from his hometown of Governor's Harbour in the Bahamas.
Star*Line 42.1, 42.4, 43.1, 43.3, 44.2, 44.3

Russel Hemmell is a French-Italian transplant in Scotland, passionate about astrophysics, history, and speculative fiction. Recent work in Aurealis, ASM, Star*Line, Grievous Angel, and others. HWA and Codexian. Find them on Twitter @SPBianchini.
Star*Line 41.3, 42.1, 42.2, 42.4, 43.1, 44.4

Berrin C. Henderson
Star*Line 32.1

J. L. Herndon (he/him) is a writer of speculative fiction and poetry. All his characters are Black unless otherwise noted. A psychologist by training, he is fascinated by people, characters, and their relationships, especially within families. You can often find him loitering around his local bookstore. Originally from Texas, he now resides in Greensboro, NC, with his wife and dog. Ask him about his novel; he could use the motivation.
Star*Line 43.4

Ethan Heusser
Star*Line 39.3

Richard Hedderman
Rhysling Anthology 2016

Gloria Heffernan
Rhysling Anthology 2016

J. C. Hendee
Rhysling Anthology 1994

Berrien C. Henderson
Dwarf Stars 2007, 2008

Elizabeth Henderson
Rhysling Anthology 2004

Samantha Henderson lives in Southern California. Her poetry has been published in Weird Tales, Goblin Fruit, Mythic Delirium, Stone Telling, Star*Line, Strange Horizons, and Lone Star Stories. Her short fiction has been published in Strange Horizons, Realms of Fantasy, Clarksworld, Fantasy, Abyss & Apex, and the anthologies Running with the Pack and Steampunk Reloaded.
Dwarf Stars 2006
Rhysling Anthology 2006, third place in 2007, second place in 2009, second place in 2009, first place in 2010, 2011, 2013
Star*Line 33.1

Howard V. Hendrix is the winner of the 2010 Dwarf Stars Award from SFPA for "Bumbershoot." His poem "Extravehicular Activity" appeared in the April 2023 issue of Scientific American. He is the author of six novels, as well as many works of shorter fiction and numerous essays (including literary criticism about science fiction). Much of his recent essay and fiction work appears in Analog. For many years he taught literature and writing at the college level.
Dwarf Stars first place in 2010
Star*Line 33.1, 45.4, 46.1, 46.2, 46.3, 46.4, 47.1, 47.2, 47.3, 47.4, 48.1

Tom Henighan
Rhysling Anthology 1989

Chad Hensley has poetry appearances in Weirdbook, Skelos Magazine, Spectral Realms, The Audient Void, and the Horror Writers Association's Poetry Showcase.
Rhysling Anthology 1996
Star*Line 34.1, 36.2, 36.3, 36.4, 37.1

Mariel Herbert writes short speculative fiction, as well as English haiku and senryu. She likes to mix science with myths, and humor with reality. Her science fiction and fantasy poems have been published in Liminality, Octavos, and Star*Line, among others. And her scifaiku and horrorku have appeared in failed haiku, Frozen Wavelets, Haiku 2022, Otoroshi Journal, and Scifaikuest. Mariel lives in Northern California, where she also runs a few speculative reading groups. She can be found online at marielherbert.wordpress.com.
Dwarf Stars 2022, 2023, 2024
Star*Line 35.1, 44.2, 44.3, 45.1, 45.2, 45.4, 46.2, 46.3, 47.2, 48.1

Feí Hernandez (b.1993 Chihuahua, Mexico) is a trans, Inglewood-raised, formerly undocumented immigrant artist, writer, healer. They have been published in POETRY, Pank Magazine, Oxford Review of Books, Frontier Poetry, The Breakbeat Poets Vol. 4: LatiNext, amongst others. They are a Define American Fellow for 2021 and are currently the Board President of Gender Justice Los Angeles. féi is the author of the full-length poetry collection Hood Criatura (Sundress Publications, 2020) which was on NPR’s Best Books of 2020. féi collects Pokémon plushies!
Rhysling Anthology 2022

Jennessa Hester
Rhysling Anthology 2024

Vicki Ann Heydron
Rhysling Anthology 1981
Star*Line 4.4

Gwendolyn Maia Hicks
Rhysling Anthology 2025

Ed Higgins’ poems and short fiction have appeared in various print and online journals including Triggerfish Critical Review, Statement Magazine, and Tigershark Magazine, among others. He is Asst. Fiction Editor for Brilliant Flash Fiction. Ed has a small organic farm in Yamhill, OR, raising a menagerie of animals including a rooster named StarTrek.
Rhysling Anthology 2016
Star*Line 36.4

Nancy Hightower
Rhysling Anthology 2014

Joshua Hiles is a life-long Midwesterner who abandoned his original plan to wander the canals of Mars as a sellsword when science proved that was impossible. When his back-up career, Venusian dinosaur-wrangler did not prove emotionally satisfying he became a writer.
Star*Line 43.2, 43.3, 44.1

Jaimee Hills
Rhysling Anthology 2011

L. L. Hill is currently resident in northern Canada. Writing is a hobby competing with photography and planting wildflowers in their spare time.
Star*Line 46.2

Alicia Hilton is an author, editor, arbitrator, professor, and former FBI Special Agent. She believes in angels and demons, magic, and monsters. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Creepy Podcast, Dreams & Nightmares, Eastern Iowa Review, Litro, Lovecraftiana, Modern Haiku, Neon, NonBinary Review, Not One of Us, Spectral Realms, Space & Time, Vastarien, World Haiku Review, Year’s Best Hardcore Horror Volumes 4, 5 & 6, and elsewhere. She is a member of the Horror Writers Association, the Science Fiction and Fantasy Poetry Association, and the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association. Her website is aliciahilton.com. Follow her on Twitter @aliciahilton01.
Dwarf Stars 2023, 2025
Star*Line 45.3, 46.2
Rhysling Anthology 2024

Carolyn M. Hinderliter
Dwarf Stars 2010, 2011, 2013, 2015, 2020
Rhysling Anthology 2010, 2013, 2017
Star*Line 34.1, 36.2, 37.4, 39.2, 39.4, 42.1, 46.3

C. William Hinderliter
Dwarf Stars2010, 2011, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2020
Star*Line 33.5, 34.1, 35.4, 36.1, 36.3, 36.4, 37.4, 39.1, 41.4, 46.3

Jordan Hirsch writes speculative fiction and poetry in Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA, where she lives with her husband. Her work has appeared with Liminality Magazine, Octavos, The Future Fire, and other venues. Find her on Twitter (@jordanrhirsch), and find more of her work on her website: jordanrhirsch.wordpress.com.
Dwarf Stars 2022
Rhysling Anthology 2022, 2023
Star*Line 44.2, 44.4, 45.3, 46.2, 47.1, 47.4, 48.1

Amase Hiroyasu
Star*Line 40.2

Christopher Hivner
Rhysling Anthology 2008

Millie Ho’s work appears in Lightspeed Magazine, Nightmare Magazine, Uncanny, and others. She was a finalist for the 2019 Rhysling Awards. Find her at millieho.net.
Rhysling Anthology third place in 2019, 2021

Emily Hockaday
Star*Line 47.2

Jamal Hodge is a multi-award-winning filmmaker and writer. As a writer, Hodge is an active member of the Horror Writer's Association and SFPA, being nominated for the 2021 & 2022 Rhysling Awards for his poems “Fermi's Spaceship” and “Loving Venus,” while his poem “The Silence of God” placed in the 2021 HWA Poetry Showcase. Jamal's poetry is featured in the anthology Chiral Mad 5 alongside such legends as Stephen King & Linda Addison. And most recently, Hodge has been tasked to be co-editor of the historical book 45 Black Men in Horror. You can find his work featured in the historical all-black issue of Star*Line (issue 43.4), Space & Time Magazine, Hybrid: Misfits, Monsters, and Other Phenomena, Penumbric Speculative Fiction Magazine, and many others. writerhodge.com.
Dwarf Stars 2022, 2025
Rhysling Anthology 2021, 2022
Star*Line 43.4, 45.2

Ada Hoffmann
Star*Line 36.1

Merav Hoffman
Rhysling Anthology 2013

Nick Hoffman grew up in a small town in Michigan, but now lives in Cork, Ireland’s second city, where he enjoys watching Star Trek reruns. His work has appeared in various haiku and senryu journals, as well as Scifaikuest, Star*Line and Eye to the Telescope.
Dwarf Stars 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023
Star*Line 42.4, 43.3, 45.3

Roald Hoffman
Rhysling Anthology 1987

Linda Hogan
Rhysling Anthology 2009

Art Holcomb
Star*Line 48.1

Martha Hollander
Rhysling Anthology 1993

Glenna Holloway
Rhysling Anthology 1995

Mark Holloway
Dwarf Stars 2016

M. J. Holmes (she/her) is a writer, teacher, and graduate student. She was a runner-up for the 2022 Andrew Siderius Memorial Contest hosted by Friday Flash Fiction. She has work published in I Know That Ghosts Have Wandered the Earth: A Collection of Brontë-Inspired Ghost Stories, The Horror Zine, and was featured by @streetwritersofficial. You can follow her on Instagram and Twitter @mjholmes3.
Dwarf Stars 2022

Rochelle Lynn Holt
Rhysling Anthology 1986

Ruth Holzer
Dwarf Stars 2017

Ted Holzman
Star*Line 36.3

Akua Lezli Hope, a 2022 SFPA Grand Master, is a paraplegic creator & wisdom seeker who uses sound, words, fiber, glass, metal, & wire to create poems, patterns, stories, music, sculpture, adornments & peace. She wrtoe her first speculative poems in the 6th grade and has been in print since 1974 with nearly 500 poems published. Her collections include Embouchure: Poems on Jazz and Other Musics (Writer’s Digest book award winner), Them Gone, & Otherwheres: Speculative Poetry (2021 Elgin Award winner). A Cave Canem fellow, her honors include the NEA, two NYFA fellowships, a Science Fiction & Fantasy Poetry Association award & multiple Best of the Net, Rhysling, Dwarf Stars & Pushcart Prize nominations. She won a 2022 New York State Council on the Arts grant to create Afrofuturist speculative, pastoral poetry. She created the Speculative Sundays Poetry Reading series. She edited the record-breaking sea-themed issue of Eye To The Telescope 42 & NOMBONO: An Anthology of Speculative Poetry by BIPOC Creators, the history-making first of its kind (Sundress Publications, 2021). Her short fiction is included in the ground-breaking speculative anthology Dark Matter, and in the new, celebrated Africa Risen anthology (Tor 2022), among others. She exhibits her artwork regularly, practices her soprano saxophone and dreams of access and freedom in the ancestral land of the Seneca.
Star*Line 9.4, 41.1, 43.4, 45.3, 45.4, 46.1, 46.2, 46.3, 47.3
Dwarf Stars 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025
Rhysling Anthology 2017, 2021, 2022, third place in 2023, honorable mention in 2024, honorable mention in 2025

Yuan Hongri (1962–) is a renowned Chinese mystic, poet, and philosopher. His work has been published in the UK, USA, India, New Zealand, Canada, and Nigeria; his poems have appeared in Poet’s Espresso Review, Orbis, Tipton Poetry Journal, Harbinger Asylum, The Stray Branch, Acumen, Pinyon Review, Taj Mahal Review, Madswirl, Shot Glass Journal, Amethyst Review, Fine Lines, and other e-zines, anthologies, and journals. His best-known works are “Platinum City” and “Golden Giant”. His works explore themes of prehistoric and future civilization.
Star*Line 44.4

Jessica J. Horowitz Born in Korea, Jessica now writes speculative fiction and poetry in New England, where they balance their aversion to cold with the inability to live anywhere without snow. Previous works can be at Flash Fiction Online, Fireside, DSF, Apparition Lit. and others. They blog infrequently and have slightly more frequent feelings and opinions on Twitter @transientj
Rhysling Anthology first place in 2020
Star*Line 38.1, 41.1

Bill Hotchkiss
Rhysling Anthology 1985

L.A. Story Houry
Rhysling Anthology 2004, 2005

Elizabeth Howard
Dwarf Stars 2010

Ellie Howard
Rhysling Anthology 2022

Juleigh Howard-Hobson’s numinous work has won the ANZAC Award, the Alfred Award and has been nominated for Best of the Net and the Pushcart Prize. The author of five formal poetry collections, her work has appeared in scores of journals across the world, including Eye to the Telescope, Anima, Enchanted Conversation, Riddled with Arrows, Polu Texni, Coffin Bell, The Literary Hatchet, Illumen, Fairy Magazine, Breach and Star*Line. English-born, semi-Australian-bred, she now lives in the cold grey wilds of the Pacific Northwest USA where she writes poetry, raises black chickens and practices useful Northern magic.
Rhysling Anthology 2018, 2020, 2021, 2022
Star*Line 40.4, 42.1, 42.4, 43.3, 45.4

Lyle Howard
Star*Line 6.2

David E. Howerton
Star*Line 33.3

Christine Howey has published four books of poetry and was named Poet Laureate of Cleveland Heights 2016–2018. Christine has led numerous writing workshops, including several at Literary Cleveland, and has been a columnist and theater critic with Cleveland Scene and other publications.
Star*Line 36.4

Ellen Huang (she/her) is a writer of the magical, whimsical, and gothic. Her poems “Aromantic Jesus,” (miniskirt magazine), “Split Attraction” (warning lines), and “You Might Not Be Struck By Lightning As You Wish” (The Rising Phoenix Review) have each been nominated for Best of the Net 2021. She has also been named in “Poets of Color to Watch for in 2021” in Luna Luna Magazine and as an ace resource on Invisible Cake Society. She reads for Whale Road Review and is published in 100+ venues including K’in Literary, Lumiere Review, Ghost City, Crow & Cross Keys, Kissing Dynamite, horse egg literary, Apparition Lit, Sword & Kettle Press, Brown Sugar Lit, and more.
Dwarf Stars 2022
Rhysling Anthology 2020

Lee Hudspeth is a poet living in Southern California. He self-published his debut, full-length poetry book Incandescent Visions in 2019. His poetry has appeared in The Heron’s Nest, Cold Moon Journal, Akitsu Quarterly, Presence, Stardust Haiku, and Anti-Heroin Chic, among others. He is currently working on a second poetry book. You can find him on Twitter @LeeHuds.
Star*Line 45.1, 46.3

Persephone Erin Hudson
Rhysling Anthology 2020

August Huerta
Rhysling Anthology 2019

Brian Hugenbruch lives in upstate New York with his family and their pets. By day, he writes information security programs to protect your data on (and from) the internet. By night, he writes speculative poetry and fiction. His poetry has appeared in publications such as Star*Line, Apparition Lit, and Liminality. You can find him online on Twitter @Bwhugen, on Instagram @the-lettersea, and at the-lettersea.com. No, he’s not sure how to say his last name, either.
Rhysling Anthology 2021, 2025
Star*Line 44.1, 44.4, 45.2, 46.1, 46.3, 47.1, 47.3, 48.1

Corinne Hughes
Dwarf Stars 2025
Star*Line 47.2

Rhys Hughes
Rhysling Anthology 1998

Marilyn Humbert lives in the northern suburbs of Sydney, New South Wales, surrounded by bush. Her pastimes include writing free verse, tanka, and haiku. Her tanka and haiku appear in international and Australian journals, anthologies and online. Some of her free-verse poems have been awarded prizes in competitions and some have been published.
Dwarf Stars 2019

Olaitan Humble is a writer and editor. He has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net Award. His writing appears in North Dakota Quarterly, FIYAH, HOBART, HOAX, Chiron Review, Superstition Review, Ethel Zine, Luna Luna Magazine, among others. Twitter: @olaitanhumble.
Rhysling Anthology 2022

Ian Hunter is a Scottish poet whose poems have appeared in magazines and anthologies in the UK, USA and Canada. He is a member of the Glasgow SF Writers Circle and poetry editor of the British Fantasy Society.
Rhysling Anthology 2013
Star*Line 35.2, 35.3, 35.4, 36.1, 36.3, 36.4, 37.4, 38.4, 39.1, 39.4, 41.4, 47.3. 47.4

Valerie Hunter teaches high school English and has had stories and poems in publications including Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Wizards in Space, and Sonder, as well as multiple anthologies.
Star*Line 47.1

Patrick Hurley lives and writes in Saint Louis. His long collection of poetry, walking, was published by Adelaide Books (NY/Lisbon). He is working on a collection of poems (one for each of the moons of Jupiter) called Callisto. Two of them published in Chrome Baby (LA) are current Best of the Net nominees. Read more of his poetry at patrickhurleypoet.com.
Star*Line 44.1

Nadaa Hussein
Rhysling Anthology 2024

Charlotte Hussey
Star*Line 34.4

Scott T. Hutchison
Star*Line 36.2, 37.3

Abi Hynes is a drama and fiction writer based in Manchester, UK. She won the Cambridge Short Story Prize earlier in 2020, and was shortlisted for the Bath Flash Fiction’s ‘Novella-in-flash’ award in 2017. Her short stories have been widely published in print and online, and have most recently appeared in Black Static, Lucent Dreaming, BFS Horizons and Neon. Her work has also been published in several short story anthologies, including recent books from Splice and Fairlight Books. Her plays have been performed across the UK, she graduated from Channel 4’s 4Screenwriting Course in 2018, and she is currently developing new shows for TV. She has written four episodes of a new historical audio drama for Audible, which will be out later in 2021.
Rhysling Anthology 2021

C. E. Hyun
Dwarf Stars 2015

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