Sheikha A. is from Pakistan and United Arab Emirates. Her work appears in over 100 literary journals, most recently Mobius, Pedestal Magazine, Abyss and Apex, The Metaworker, Fourth & Sycamore, and elsewhere. More can be found at sheikha82.wordpress.com.
Star*Line 40.3
X. S. Aaron is a harpist, a medieval literature enthusiast, and an adjunct writing instructor who strives to inspire her students to share their stories and truths through words. Her work also appears in Fudoki Magazine.
Star*Line 46.4
Anne Carly Abad received the Poet of the Year Award in the 2017 Nick Joaquin Literary Awards. She has also received nominations for the Pushcart Prize and the Rhysling Award. Her work has appeared in Apex, Mythic Delirium, and Strange Horizons, to name a few. Her first poetry collection, We've Been Here Before, was published in 2022 from Aqeuduct Press.
Rhysling Anthology 2017, 2021
Star*Line 36.3, 37.4, 45.1
Bill Abbott is the author of Let Them Eat MoonPie, the history of poetry slam in the Southeast, and the poetry collection (My Life and Other) Famous Train Wrecks of Ohio. He has been published in Front Porch Review, Radius, The November 3rd Club, Flypaper Magazine, and The Sow's Ear. Mr. Abbott lives in Ohio and teaches creative writing at Central State University.
Star*Line 43.2, 44.4, 46.4
Rasha Abdulhadi is a queer Palestinian Southerner disabled by Long Covid. Their work has been featured in Kweli, Mizna, ROOM, FIYAH, Strange Horizons, the Poem-a-Day series, and is anthologized in Snaring New Suns, Unfettered Hexes, and Luminescent Threads: Connections to Octavia E. Butler. A writer, editor, fiber artist, and cultural organizer, Rasha is the author of Shell Houses (2017) and who is owed springtime (2021).
Dwarf Stars 2023
Rhysling Anthology 2023
Jonel Abellanosa resides in Cebu City, the Philippines. His poetry has appeared in numerous journals and his speculative poetry in Pedestal Magazine, Star*Line, Eye to the Telescope, Inkscrawl, Liquid Imagination, and Ghost City Review. His poetry has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, Best of the Net, and Dwarf Stars award. His poetry collections include Songs from My Mind’s Tree and Multiverse (Clare Songbirds Publishing House), 50 Acrostic Poems (Cyberwit), In the Donald’s Time (Poetic Justice Books and Art). His first speculative poetry collection, Pan’s Saxophone, was released in 2019 by Weasel Press.
Dwarf Stars 2015
Star*Line 37.2, 40.3, 41.2, 41.4, 44.3, 45.1
L. Acadia is an assistant professor at National Taiwan University, visiting professor at Heidelberg University, Taiwan Literature Base 2024–2025 writer-in-residence, and Best-of-the-Net-nominated member of the Taipei Poetry Collective and Codex, with speculative poetry in Dreams & Nightmares, Eye to the Telescope, Star*Line, Strange Horizons, and elsewhere. Connect on X and Instagram @acadialogue.
Star*Line 47.3
Diane Ackerman (1948–) is the author of two dozen highly-acclaimed works of poetry and nonfiction, including New York Times bestsellers The Zookeeper's Wife (2007), A Natural History of the Senses (1990), The Human Age (2014), and Pulitzer Prize Finalist One Hundred Names for Love (2012).
Rhysling Anthology 2004
Star*Line 9.2
Cathy Ackerson
Dwarf Stars 2007, 2008
Star*Line 13.1, 30.1, 30.3, 30.4
Duane Ackerson
Dwarf Stars 2006, 2008
Rhysling Anthology first place in 1978, first place in 1979, 1980, 1993, 2002, 2006, 2007, 2010
Star*Line 1.4, 1.10, 1.12, 2.1, 2.2, 2.6, 3.5, 6.1, 6.3, 6.4, 6.5, 7.2, 8.1, 8.6, 9.5, 12.1, 14.6, 15.3, 26.1, 29.2, 29.3, 30.1, 30.3, 30.4, 31.3, 31.6, 32.1, 32.2, 32.3, 32.4, 33.2, 33.4
Angela Acosta, Ph.D. (she/her) is a bilingual Mexican American poet and Assistant Professor of Spanish at the University of South Carolina. Her creative and academic work center on imagining possible worlds and preserving the cultural legacies of women writers. She is a 2022 Dream Foundry Contest for Emerging Writers Finalist, 2022 Somos en Escrito Extra-Fiction Contest Honorable Mention, and Utopia Award nominee. Her Rhysling nominated poetry has appeared in Heartlines Spec, Shoreline of Infinity, Apparition Lit, Radon Journal, and Space & Time. She is author of the Elgin nominated poetry collections Summoning Space Travelers (Hiraeth Publishing, 2022) and A Belief in Cosmic Dailiness (Red Ogre Review, 2023).
Dwarf Stars 2024, 2025
Rhysling Anthology 2023
Star*Line 46.1
Danny Adams
Rhysling Anthology 2006, 2007
Star*Line 29.1, 29.3, 29.5, 30.3, 30.5, 30.6, 32.2, 33.3
Diana Adams
Rhysling Anthology 2009
Lane Adamson
Star*Line 30.1
Linda D. Addison is a five-time recipient of the HWA Bram Stoker Award®, including for How To Recognize A Demon Has Become Your Friend, recipient of HWA Lifetime Achievement Award, HWA Mentor of the Year and SFPA Grand Master. Her site: LindaAddisonWriter.com.
Dwarf Stars 2006, 2008
Rhysling Anthology 2002, 2006, 2013, 2018, 2021, third place in2022, 2023, 2024
Star*Line 22.5, 36.3, 43.4
Opal Palmer Adisa is a poet/writer, cultural activist and gender speciality at The UWI, Mona. She writes in all genres and has published twenty collections; forthcoming, the authorized children biography of Portia Simpson Miller, the first female Prime Minister, titled Portia Dreams.
Star*Line 43.4
Mary Alexander Agner writes of dead women, telescopes, and secrets in poetry, prose, and Ada. Her book of poems in the voices of female scientists, equations, and planetary bodies came into the world as 2011 left it. She can be found online at pantoum.org.
Rhysling Anthology 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015.
Star*Line 30.6
Adjei Agyei-Baah (born Eric Adjei Baah, June 29, 1977, Kumasi, Ashanti Region, Ghana), lecturer, translator, editor, and haiku poet. He is currently a PhD candidate in English at the Division of Education, University of Waikato, New Zealand. He is the cofounder of Africa Haiku Network, Poetry Foundation Ghana, and The Mamba, Africa’s first haiku journal. Agyei-Baah’s work won recognition in the Japan-Russia Haiku Contest in 2014, received the Heron’s Nest Award (best haiku of issue) in 2016, been shortlisted for the World Haiku Club’s R. H. Blyth Award in 2019, and anthologized in Kala Ramesh’s Naad Anunaad: An Anthology of Contemporary World Haiku (2016). His debut haiku collection, Afriku (2016), was commended by Nigerian Nobel Prize-winner Wole Soyinka. His fourth book, Piece of My Fart (2018) is the first senryu collection from Africa. Agyei-Baah is the primary author of the four Haikupedia articles about African haiku. He lives in Kumasi, Ghana.
Dwarf Stars 2022
Ed Ahern resumed writing after forty odd years in foreign intelligence and international sales. He’s had four hundred fifty stories and poems published so far, and six books. Ed works the other side of writing at Bewildering Stories, where he manages a posse of eight review editors.
Star*Line 46.1
Connor Ahluwalia is a student in Ottawa, Canada. He has a short story in Strange Constellations.
Star*Line 40.2
Casey Aimer is a science fiction poet who holds master’s degrees in both poetry and publishing. He works for a non-profit publishing science research articles and is founder of Radon Journal, an anarchist science fiction semiprozine. His poetry has been featured in Space and Time Magazine, Apparition Lit, Star*Line, Heartlines Spec, and many more. An SFWA and SFPA member, his work has been a Rhysling Award finalist and Soft Star Magazine contest winner. He can be found on Bluesky and CaseyAimer.com
Rhysling Anthology honorable mention 2024, 2025
Star*Line 46.4, 47.3, 48.1
Kythryne Aisling
Rhysling Anthology 2015
Oluwatomiwa Ajeigbe is a writer, poet and mathematician. His works have been shortlisted for the Brigitte Poirson Poetry Contests and Eriata Oribhabor Poetry Prize. He has works published or forthcoming in Eye To The Telescope, Ngiga Review, Kalahari Review and elsewhere. He tweets @OluwaSigma and writes from Lagos, Nigeria.
Star*Line 44.1
Akis is a shapeshifter disguised as an AI scientist to steal tech secrets from humans, and maybe help them make their innovations less dystopian for everyone. When his mission is complete, he will settle forever in his greek cave where he conjures dark stories, some of which can be found at Apex, Dread Machine, Flame Tree, Gamut, Heartlines Spec and other bloodied places. Friends may visit his lair for more unhinged stories: linktr.ee/akislinardos
Star*Line 47.3
Alfredo Álamo
Star*Line 35.2, 35.3
Layla Al-Bedawi
Rhysling Anthology 2017, 2018
Brian Aldiss (1925–2017) was one of the most important voices in science fiction. He wrote his first novel while working as a bookseller in Oxford. Shortly afterwards he wrote his first work of science fiction and soon gained international recognition. Adored for his innovative literary techniques, evocative plots, and irresistible characters, he became a Grand Master of Science Fiction in 1999.
Rhysling Anthology 2009
Star*Line 5.2, 6.1
Camille Alexa (A. Camille Renwick)
Rhysling Anthology 2012. Star*Line 31.2
Camille Alexander
Dwarf Stars 2011
Francis W. Alexander is a seven-time Rhysling nominee and three-time Dwarf Stars nominee. He is the author of When the Mushrooms Come and I Reckon. He is the creator of the Forbidden Haibun and cocreator with Terrie Relf and Theresa Santitoro of the drabbun is the coeditor of a drabbun anthology. He has had poems published in Space & Time, Abyss and Apex, Modern Haiku, Contemporary Haibun, failed Haiku, Scifaikuest, Otoroshi Journal, and others.
Dwarf Stars 2009, 2015, 2022, 2024
Rhysling Anthology 2009, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2024
Star*Line 15.4, 15.6, 16.4, 17.1, 28.2, 28.4, 31.2, 31.4, 32.4, 32.5, 35.3, 39.1, 39.4, 40.2, 44.4, 46.4, 47.2
Will Alexander
Star*Line 30.5
Anita Allen
Dwarf Stars 2012
Blair H. Allen
Star*Line 25.3
Douglass Allen is an octogenarian poet, lifelong student and teacher. His work has appeared in many journals the past 50 years. He writes mostly science and philosophy commentary and lyrical poetry.
Star*Line 45.1
Melissa Allen
Dwarf Stars 2012
Mike Allen is the editor of Mythic Delirium and a past president of SFPA. He is a two-time World Fantasy Award finalist, a two-time Shirley Jackson Award finalist, and a three-time winner of the Rhysling Award. He's also the editor and publisher of Mythic Delirium Books. You can follow Mike’s exploits as a writer at descentintolight.com, as an editor at mythicdelirium.com, and all at once on Twitter at @mythicdelirium.
Dwarf Stars 2008, 2009, 2012
Rhysling Anthology 1998, 2001, 2002, first place in 2003, second place in 2003, third place in 2004, third place in 2005, first place in 2006, first place in 2007, 2008, 2009, second place in 2010, 2012, 2013, second place in 2014, 2015, 2016, 2020, 2022
Star*Line 24.2, 25.1, 25.5, 26.2, 26.4, 27.1, 27.2, 27.4, 27.5, 28.1, 28.2, 28.4, 28.5, 28.6, 31.2, 31.5, 33.3, 33.4, 33.5, 35.3, 40.4, 44.3
R. A. Allen’s poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in the New York Quarterly, B O D Y, The Penn Review, RHINO, The Los Angeles Review, The Hollins Critic, and elsewhere. He has nominations for The Pushcart Prize and the Best of the Net 2020. He has short stories in publications such as The Literary Review, The Barcelona Review, PANK, and Best American Mystery Stories. R. A. lives in Memphis and was born on the same day the Donner Party resorted to cannibalism: December 26th. bodyliterature.com/2020/02/17/r-a-allen/
Star*Line 46.1
Stephanie Andrea Allen, Ph.D. is a Black lesbian writer, scholar, and publisher. Her work can be found in various online and print publications, including Big Echo: Critical Science Fiction Magazine, Sinister Wisdom, Black From the Future: A Collection of Black Speculative Writing, and in her collection of essays and short fiction, A Failure to Communicate. Her collection of speculative short fiction, How to Dispatch a Human: Stories and Suggestions, was published March 2021 from BLF Press.
Star*Line 43.4
Saira Ali
Rhysling Anthology 2015
Nicholas Alti
Star*Line 48.1
Carmen Lucia Alvarado was born in Quetzaltenango. She lives in Guatemala City and is the author of Imagen y Semejanza (2010), Poetas Astronautas (2012), and Edad geológica del miedo (2018).
Rhysling Anthology 2021
Star*Line 42.4
Hiroyasu Amase (Susumu Watanabe, b. 1931) is a writer, critic, and physician from Hiroshima, the editor of Science-Fiction/Science-Fantasy Haiku (Esuefu-kagaku fantajii kushuu, 2016), and founder of the science-fiction group Imaginian. His translated speculative poetry in English appears in Star*Line and Silver Blade.
Star*Line 41.1, 41.3
Chris Ambrose
Rhysling Anthology 2006.
Star*Line 29.5, 31.1, 31.3, 32.3
West Ambrose
Rhysling Anthology 2024
John Amen is the editor of Pedestal Magazine.
Rhysling Anthology 2010
Star*Line 34.3, 36.3, 38.1
Erik Amundsen
Rhysling Anthology second place in 2012
Dwarf Stars 2015
Madhur Anand's debut book of prose This Red Line Goes Straight to Your Heart (2020) won the Governor General's Literary Award for Nonfiction. Her debut collection of poems A New Index for Predicting Catastrophes (2015) was a finalist for the Trillium Book Award for Poetry, named one of 10 all-time "trailblazing" poetry collections by the CBC, and received a starred review in Publishers Weekly. Her second collection of poems Parasitic Oscillations (2022) was published to international acclaim, named a Globe and Mail Top 100 Book, and a "top pick" for Spring poetry by the CBC. She is a professor of ecology and sustainability at the University of Guelph, where she was appointed the inaugural Director of the Guelph Institute for Environmental Research.
Rhysling Anthology 2023
Angelo B. Ancheta lives in the Philippines.
Star*Line 40.3, 41.1
Anastasia Andersen received her MFA in Creative Writing at the University of New Mexico. Her work has appeared in various publications and journals including Dreams and Nightmares, Star*Line, Puerto del Sol, Poet Lore, and Southwestern American Literature. Her work has also been included in two Rhysling Anthologies and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize.
Rhysling Anthology 1995, 2003
Start*Line 37.3
Colleen Anderson lives in Vancouver, BC, and has a BFA in writing. Her works have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, Aurora, Rhysling and Dwarf Stars Awards in poetry, and longlisted for the Stoker Award in fiction. She has edited three anthologies and guest-edited Eye to the Telescope. She has served on both Stoker Award and British Fantasy Award juries, and received BC Arts Council and Canada Council grants for her writing. Her works have seen print in numerous venues, including Polu Texni, HWA Poetry Showcases, Shadow Atlas and Heroic Fantasy Quarterly. Her poetry collection I Dreamed a World is available from LVP Publications. Her fiction collection, A Body of Work (Black Shuck Books) is also available online. colleenanderson.wordpress.com
Dwarf Stars 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025
Rhysling Anthology 2016, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, first place in 2023, 2025
Star*Line 11.2, 14.2, 15.3, 15.4, 16.1, 19.4, 42.3, 43.1, 43.3, 44.2, 44.3, 44.4, 45.2, 45.4, 46.3, 47.1, 47.4
Donald R. Anderson
Dwarf Stars 2008
E. Kristin Anderson is the author of seven chapbooks including A Guide for the Practical Abductee (Red Bird Chapbooks 2014) Pray, Pray, Pray: Poems I wrote to Prince in the middle of the night (Porkbelly Press, 2015), 17 Days (ELJ Publications) Acoustic Battery Life (ELJ 2016), Fire in the Sky (Grey Book Press 2016), and She Witnesses (dancing girl press, 2016). Her nonfiction anthology, Dear Teen Me, based on the popular website of the same name, was published in 2012 by Zest Books (distributed by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) and her memoir in verse, The Summer of Unraveling, is forthcoming from ELJ. She has worked at The New Yorker magazine, has a B.A. in Classics from Connecticut College and was a poetry editor for Found Poetry Review and also edits at Nonbinary Review and Lucky Bastard Press. She has published poetry in many magazines worldwide, including Juked, Hotel Amerika, [PANK], Asimov’s Science Fiction, Cicada, Alyss, and The Quotable. She lives in Austin, TX, and blogs at EKristinAnderson.com.
Rhysling Anthology 2017
Star*Line 39.3
Erland Anderson
Rhysling Anthology 1983
Jack Anderson
Rhysling Anthology 1979
Star*Line 2.7
James Arthur Anderson is a retired English Professor who currently teaches as an adjunct professor at East Georgia State College. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of Rhode Island and has published poetry in numerous literary journals, including Gulfstream, The Bryant Literary Review, and Aries. He has had speculative poetry accepted by Scifaikuest and won first prize in the rhymed poetry category of the 76th Annual Writer’s Digest Writing Competition. He is the author of The Linguistics of Stephen King: Layered Language and Meaning in the Fiction (McFarland, 2017) and Excavating Stephen King: a Darwinist Hermeneutic Study of the Fiction (Lexington, 2020). He lives in Garfield, Georgia, with his wife Lynn, and his dog and horses.
Dwarf Stars 2023, 2024
Star*Line 44.4, 46.1, 47.1, 48.1
Jarod K. Anderson
Star*Line 36.2, 39.4
Leslie J. Anderson’s writing has appeared in Asimov’s, Uncanny Magazine, Daily Science Fiction, and Apex. She currently lives in a small white house beside a cemetery with three good dogs and a Roomba. More of her work at lesliejanderson.com.
Rhysling Anthology 2014
Star*Line 36.1, 44.2
Natsumi Ando
Star*Line 40.2, 41.1, 41.2, 41.3, 42.2
Ryu Ando is a poet. He spends his time in Los Angeles and Saitama, Japan. His works have appeared in Strange Horizons, Abyss & Apex, The Deadlands, and many more.
Rhysling Anthology 2016, 2018, 2023, honorable mention in 2025
Randall Andrews is an award-winning fiction writer and poet from southern Michigan. His poems have been published in places like Star*Line, Abyss & Apex, Space & Time, Dreams & Nightmares, and Illumen. When not writing, he can be found wearing the soles off a pair of running shoes, listening to his favorite John Williams soundtracks, or hand-feeding his loyal flock of wild songbirds.
Dwarf Stars 2023, 2025
Star*Line 44.2, 45.2, 45.3, 45.4, 46.1, 46.2, 46.3, 46.4, 47.1, 47.2, 47.3, 47.4
Arlene Ang
Star*Line 26.4, 29.5, 29.6
Susan Antolin
Dwarf Stars 2016
Helga Anton-Beitz is German and lives at the Baltic Sea. She is happy to have spent two years in the US where her affection to the English language grew. She earned her doctoral degree in Pharmaceutical Chemistry and enjoys transforming her scientific interest into creative writing.
Dwarf Stars 2020
Star*Line 40.2
Billy Antonio lives in the Philippines.
Dwarf Stars 2018
Star*Line 39.4, 41.4
Aurora Antonovic
Dwarf Stars 2011
Elizabeth (Betsy) Aoki is a poet, short story writer and game producer. She has received fellowships and residencies from the City of Seattle, Artist Trust Foundation, Hedgebrook and Clarion West Writers Workshop. She has a short story in Upper Rubber Boot Books’ anthology Sharp & Sugar Tooth: Women Up to No Good. Her poem "Walking Here is to be swallowed by the sky" was a Finalist for the Auburn Witness Poetry Prize judged by Naomi Shihab Nye. You can find her tweeting at twitter.com/baoki or contact her at betsyaoki.com
Rhysling Anthology 2019
Fay Aoyagi
Dwarf Stars 2007
Jim Applegate
Rhysling Anthology 2003
Arachelle (she/her) is an aspiring author and poet from Oklahoma. She is a Nʉmʉnʉʉ (Comanche) Nation citizen with Otoe-Missouria, Pawnee, and white ancestry. Like many of her ancestors, she was born in Oklahoma and is determined not to leave. She recently obtained a BS in Mechanical Engineering from Columbia University.
Rhysling Anthology 2022
Katrina Archer is a Viable Paradise alumna and lives in Canada.
Star*Line 41.2
Peter Archer works in an academic library and his poetry has appeared in US and UK magazines. One of his poems was selected for a forthcoming anthology on fatherhood and he is currently completing a comic sci-fi novel.
Star*Line 44.2
Marion Arenas
Rhysling Anthology 1998
Ivan Argüelles (1939–2024)
Rhysling Anthology 1987
Star*Line 7.1, 7.2, 8.2, 10.3, 11.⅚
Megan Arkenberg lives and writes in California. Her work has recently appeared in Asimov's, Lightspeed, Strange Horizons, and The Best Horror of the Year, Volume 5, and has tried for best short story of 2012 in the Asimov's Readers' Award. Megan procrastinates by editing the fantasy e-zine Mirror Dance.
Dwarf Stars 2009, 2010, 2014
Rhysling Anthology first place in 2012, third place in 2013, 2013, 2014, second place in 2015
Star*Line 32.1, 36.3
Louis Armand
Rhysling Anthology 2006
Rae Armantrout
Rhysling Anthology 2008
Patrick Armstrong
Dwarf Stars 2014
Star*Line 36.1
Michael A. Arnzen is a professor of English at Seton Hill University, home of the MFA in Writing Popular Fiction. He has won four Bram Stoker Awards for his horror writing, and has published several poetry collections, including Freakcidents, Rigormarole, and The Gorelets Omnibus. He's been an SFPA member for thirty years and continues to publish work in journals and anthologies, and most recently co-edited the fifth HWA Poetry Showcase. He often also tweets poems—follow him at @MikeArnzen on twitter, or see what else he's up to now at gorelets.com. He’s also the author of SFPA’s T-shirt tagline, In Space No One Can Hear You Rhyme.
Dwarf Stars 2012
Rhysling Anthology 1995, 2000, 2006
Star*Line 13.2, 13.6, 14.2, 15.5, 15.7, 16.2, 16.4, 17.2, 18.6, 19.1, 26.2
Virginia Aronson
Star*Line 32.3
Stuart M. Arotsky
Star*Line 24.1, 24.2
Arpy
Star*Line 47.2
John Arthur
Star*Line 37.1
Toni Artuso is an emerging/aging transfemale writer based in Salem, MA. Her work has appeared in The Christian Science Monitor, The Aurorean, Ibbetson Street Press, Penumbric Speculative Fiction Magazine, and All Worlds Wayfarer.
Star*Line 45.4
Hifsa Ashraf is an award-winning bilingual poet, author, editor, and social activist from Rawalpindi, Pakistan. She is a pioneer in her country for writing modern Japanese-style micropoetry in English and Urdu. Her work has been widely published in international journals, newspapers, magazines, blogs and anthologies. As an editor she jointly curates the Haiku Commentary blog. Hifsa is the author of six micropoetry books on gender-based taboos, prejudice, stereotyping, mental health, cultural symbolism, cultural history, women’s rights and empowerment, children’s rights, interfaith harmony, climate change, socio-cultural, and socio-political issues. She has won The Touchstone Award for Individual Poems 2021 from The Haiku Foundation, USA. Her poem was shortlisted for The Touchstone Award for Individual Poems 2022. She received special mention for her poetry collection, Her Fading Henna Tattoo, in the Touchstone Distinguished Books Award 2020 and in the Haiku Society of America Merit Book Award 2021. Her most recent micropoetry collection is hazy crescent moon by Alba Publishing UK. Social media: @hifsays.
Dwarf Stars 2022, 2024
Isaac Asimov (1920–1992) immigrated with his family from Russia to the United States and became a biochemistry professor while pursuing writing. He published his first novel, Pebble in the Sky, in 1950. An immensely prolific author who penned nearly 500 books, he published influential sci-fi works like I, Robot and the Foundation trilogy, as well as books in a variety of other genres.
Rhysling Anthology 1978
Assu
Dwarf Stars 2007, 2013
lae astra
Star*Line 47.2
Hope Athearn
Rhysling Anthology 1985
Star*Line 8.5, 9.2, 15.2
Margaret Atwood
Rhysling Anthology second place in 2008
Elspeth Aubrey
Rhysling Anthology 1989
Star*Line 6.5, 11.4
Daniel Ausema poems have appeared in Strange Horizons, The Pedestal and Mythic Delirium, among many other publications, and been nominated for a Rhysling Award. He is a member of the SFPA. Daniel lives in Colorado, at the foot of the Rockies
Rhysling Anthology 2016, 2022
Star*Line 40.1, 40.3, 43.3, 44.3, 45.3, 46.4, 47.1
Alec Austin
Star*Line 35.3
Joseph Salvatore Aversano was a big Star Wars fan when about the size of an Ewok or Jawa. While he no longer likes wars so much, he does like looking up at the stars. His poems have been published in numerous journals such as E-ratio, Bones, is/let, Die Leere Mitte, Modern Haiku, otata, and Otoliths.
Dwarf Stars 2015, 2020
Davian Aw is a Rhysling Award nominee whose poetry has appeared in Star*Line, Mythic Delirium, Abyss & Apex, Not One of Us and Strange Horizons, among others. He lives in Singapore with his family and a niggling sense of doom named Phil.
Rhysling Anthology 2018, 2021
Star*Line 39.2, 39.3, 40.1, 40.4, 41.2, 42.2, 42.3, 43.1, 43.3, 44.2
Lana Hechtman Ayers
Rhysling Anthology third place in 2010, 2018
Blythe Ayne
Rhysling Anthology second place in 1997
Star*Line 19.4, 19.6, 20.4, 20.5, 24.5