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This year's featured authors include:
Kathleen Alcalá - keynote speaker
Faith Adiele
Chikodi Anunobi
Edwina Martin-Arnold
Marcia Baker-Johnson
Flor Fernandez Barrios
Alvin Horn
Antonio Hopson
Charles Johnson
Moon-Ho Jung
Bharti Kirchner
Stephen Ling
Maliha Masood
Georgia McDade
María Nélida Mendoza
Maria de Lourdes Victoria Muguira
Sultan Mohamed
Ken Mochizuki
Ken Morrow
Lensey Namioka
Carolyn V. Parnell
Linda Dalal Sawaya
Bob Santos
Nisi Shawl
Frederick Su
Indu
Sundaresan
Kim-Marie Walker
Sasha Su-Ling Welland
Shawn Wong
Kathleen Alcalá, Keynote Speaker
www.kathleenalcala.com
Kathleen Alcalá is the author of a short story collection and three novels set in the Southwest and 19th Century Mexico, which have received the Western States Book Award, the Governor's Writers Award, and the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award. She teaches advanced fiction writing in University of Washington Extension, as well as at workshops and programs including Seattle University, the University of New Mexico, Field's End, and Centrum. Kathleen is a co-founder of and contributing editor to The Raven Chronicles, and a member of the writers group, Los Norte ños. She serves on the board of Richard Hugo House and the advisory board of Con Tinta. Her new collection of essays, The Desert Remembers My Name , is published by the University of Arizona Press. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Faith Adiele
www.adiele.com
Faith Adiele is the co-author of the upcoming book, Coming of Age Around the World: A Multicultural Anthology. She is also the author of Meeting Faith: An Inward Odyssey and The Student Body: A Novel. Her works have earned numerous honors, including, the PEN Beyond Margins Award for Best Biography/Memoir of 2004, the John Guyon Literary Nonfiction Prize from Crab Orchard Review (2001), the Millennium Award from Creative Non-Fiction (2000), and the Willard R. Espy Literary Foundation Award (1999).
Adiele received a BA in Southeast Asian Studies from Harvard & Radcliffe Colleges, an MA in Creative Writing from Lesley College, and MFAs from the University of Iowa in both Fiction (2001) and Nonfiction (2002).
Currently, She lives in Pittsburgh, where she is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Pittsburgh, and finishing a memoir, which inspired the PBS documentary "My Journey Home," about growing up Nigerian/Nordic/American and then traveling to Nigeria to find her father and siblings. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Chikodi Añunobi
www.chikodianunobi.com
Chikodi Añunobi is the author of Nri Warriors of Peace, which is about the Nri Kingdom of Southeastern Nigeria. The story follows several generations of Nri in the eleventh century and focuses on the time of two Eze Nri (Kings) -- Igwe Nwadike, the beloved elder statesman, and his reluctant successor, Okoye, a successful trader. In this book, Anunobi presents a dazzling and unforgettable vision of a people and a culture, whose interactions with each other and with the natural and spiritual world, can open startling new perspectives into our own lives. (Info from publisher)
Añunobi, who is a descendant of Nri from Enugwu-Ukwu Nri in Anambra State, Southeastern Nigeria, began learning more about Nri culture during his studies at the University of Washington. Due to his tremendous interest in the culture, he decided to write a historical novel about Nri civilization that would be both educational and inspirational. The book has earned praise in both the general population and the African American communities.
A graduate of the University of Washington at Bothell, Washington, Añunobi currently works as a software QA engineer. He is working on his second novel -another historical novel.
Nri Warriors of Peace is a vivid historical story about the 11th century Nri Kingdom in West Africa, present-day Nigeria. The book is the winner of the Best Books 2006 Book Awards in the Fiction & Literature: Multicultural and African American Fiction categories. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Edwina Martin-Arnold
www.edwinamartin-arnold.com
Edwina Martin-Arnold is the author of several romance novels, including Eve's Subscription, Jolie's Surrender, and Chocolate Friday. Her most recent romance novel is House Guest, published in 2006, which is a story about Dr. Veronica Howell who suddenly finds that her life is threatened. For security, she hires an ex-Navy Seal, Malik Cutler, to protect her. The story follows these two characters as they get to know each other more personally during their enchanting interactions.
Martin-Arnold attended the University of Washington for her undergraduate degree and later attended the University of Puget Sound Law School. After graduation, she spent seven-years as a prosecutor. Martin-Arnold left her profession to spend more time with her children. It was during this time that she was able to fulfill her life long fantasy of becoming a romance writer.
Martin Arnold is currently working on her fifth novel. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Marcia Baker-Johnson
Marcia Baker-Johnson, born in Cleveland, Ohio, is the author of Expression from My Heart. She was inspired to write her first poem by the death of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1968. Her first poem, "Ode to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.," started her on the path to writing. "My writing reflects some of my life interactions. People inspire me to write by what they say, do, and often by what they don't say. My poetry comes from my heart."
Baker-Johnson attended the University of Minnesota where she majored in dental hygiene, with a minor in public health and sociology. She was nominated in Who's Who in America in 2005 for 32 years in service as a dental hygienist ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Flor Fernandez Barrios
Flor Fernandez Barrios is the author of The Mask of Oya, a story that takes readers on a spiritual and physical journey, from modern Los Angeles to the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico, following the gentle teachings of her grandmother, a powerful curandera. She is also the author of Blessed by Thunder. The author's work has been anthologized in several collections, including Storming Heaven's Gate: An Anthology of Spiritual Writing by Women, Intimate Nature: The Bond Between Women and Animals, The Fabric of the Future: Women Visionaries Illuminate the Path to Tomorrow, Face to Face: Women Writers on Faith, Mysticism, and Awakening,I Wanna Be Sedated: 30 Writers On Parenting teenagers. Her writing has also appeared in Raven Chronicles, and she was one of the featured writers in Seattle Arts magazine celebrating women of color.
Born in Cuba, Flor Fernandez Barrios emigrated to the United States in 1970 when she was fourteen years old. She graduated in 1985 from International College with a Doctorate degree in Transpersonal Psychology. She is currently in private practice as psychotherapist in Seattle. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Alvin Horn
www.romanticblues.com
Alvin Horn was born in Seattle, under the bluest skies there ever were, but loves Houston, Hot-lanta, Vegas, Vancouver B.C., and most parts of California. He works in education and coaches high school sports here in the Northwest. The self-published author has e-published stories and poetry for the people who love good fiction and romance. You can catch him around the Northwest reciting poetry at different venues. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Antonio Hopson
www.antoniohopson.com
Antonio Hopson's surreal and poignant stories have been widely published in
both print (Quiet Shorts Magazine, Wonder Boy, 20 Dissidents and Old Growth
Journal) and electronic journals (The Harrow Magazine, Monongahela Review,
The Subterranean Quarterly, OutCry Magazine, Lost Magazine, The Piker Press and also NPR commentator Andrei Codrescu's Exquisite Corpse). He has
received Farmhouse Magazine's Reader's Choice and was invited to perform at
Seattle 's Richard Hugo House as a featured writer.
Hopson is a biology
teacher at Seattle's Lakeside School. He is currently working on a novel
addressing the harms of discrimination and false divinity. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP

Charles Johnson
American novelist, short story writer, essayist, and cartoonist. Johnson, whose balance of philosophy and folklore has been praised since the publication of his first novel in 1974, gained prominence when his novel, Middle Passage (1990), won the National Book Award in 1990. Like his other works of fiction, Middle Passage embodies Johnson's controversial version of black literature, defined in his Being and Race: Black Writing since 1970 (1988) as "a fiction of increasing artistic and intellectual growth, one that enables us as a people-as a culture-to move from narrow complaint to broad celebration."
Born in Evanston , Illinois , Johnson began his career as a cartoonist. Under the tutelage of cartoonist Lawrence Lariar, he saw his work published by the time he was seventeen years old. His two collections of cartoons were acclaimed for their subtle but pointed satire of race relations, and their success led to "Charlie's Pad," a 1971 series on public television that Johnson created, coproduced, and hosted. As an undergraduate at Southern Illinois University, Johnson studied with novelist and literary theorist John Gardner, whose conception of "moral fiction," demanding from the author a near-fanatical commitment to technique, imagination, and ethics-deeply impressed Johnson. Johnson's first novel, Faith and the Good Thing , was published in 1974 when the author was studying for this Ph.D. in phenomenology and literary aesthetics at the State University of New York at Stonybrook. He currently teaches at the University of Washington , Seattle. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Moon-Ho Jung
Moon-Ho Jung is the author of "Coolies" and Cane: Race, Labor, and Sugar in the Age of Emancipation, which is a historical study of Chinese labor in the South of the United States. He has also written several other books and articles examining Chinese labor in U.S. history, as well as other Asian American studies.
Jung received his Ph.D. in History from Cornell University and taught previously at Cornell and Oberlin College before joining the UW faculty in 2001. He is an Associate Professor of History and Adjunct Associate Professor of American Ethnic Studies at the University of Washington, where he teaches a wide range of courses on race, politics, and Asian American history.
Jung is currently at work on a second book project, titled Race Radicals: Asian American Political Struggles in the Age of Empire. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Bharti Kirchner
www.bhartikirchner.com
Bharti Kirchner is the author of novels, cookbooks and hundreds of short pieces. Her most recent work is Pastries: A Novel of Desserts and Discoveries, which is a fictional story about a Seattle baker trying to maintain her bakery in the midst of drama and competition while attempting to rediscover her touch for baking.
Kirchner is also an award-winning cook and has written four cookbooks, including The Healthy Cuisine of India and Indian Inspired, which was selected among top ten cookbooks of 1993 by USA Today and one of the best cookbooks of 1993 by Chicago Tribune.
Kirchner is a freelance book reviewer for The Seattle Times and is a frequent speaker at writer's conferences, book festivals, and universities throughout the nation. Prior to becoming a writer, Bharti worked as a systems engineer for IBM and as a systems manager for Bank of America, San Francisco. She has also worked in Europe and other continents as a computer systems consultant. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Stephen Ling
Stephen E. Ling. was born in Ipoh, Perak, Malaysia. He was adopted and moved to live on a farm, working under the harsh sun to help his family eke out a subsistence living. His mother became the family breadwinner.
Realizing that education was the key to a better life, Ling applied for and won scholarships to study in the United States , where became a teacher of English and economics. His first book, which recounts his early childhood hardships growing up in Malsia, was published in 2006. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Maliha Masood
Maliha Masood was born in Karachi , Pakistan where she spent an idyllic childhood steeped in cross-cultural fusion, which included Listening to the Beetles, dancing to Travolta and reciting the Quran. In 1982her family immigrated to the States and settled in Seattle , WA. Maliha found herself entering the seventh grade and adopting an American accent. Fluent in her native Urdu, Arabic and French, Maliha studied International Business at the University of Washington and went on to work in the IT sector for six years as a research analyst before turning toward writing. She is a graduate of Tufts and Harvard Universities.
Winner of the Jack Straw award in creative non-fiction, Maliha's writings on women, culture and Islam have been featured in several antholgies. Maliha also appeared in and co-wrote an award winning documentary film Nazrah: A Muslim Woman's Perspective. Her book, Saatar Days, Henna Nights: Adventures, Dreams, and Destinations Across the Middle East, Chronicles, invites the reader to share her experiences in an intimate, cross-cultural journey. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Georgia McDade
aawaseattle
Retired English professor Georgia McDade believes that each of us has stories to tell and that truths abound. In her writing she focuses on truths she has been taught, discovered or reaffirmed. Her works include Travel Tips for Dream Trips. She is a prolific writer of plays, essays, stories and poetry and has contributed to the African-American Writers' Aliance anthologies: Words? Words! Words and Gifted Voices. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
María Nélida Mendoza
María Nélida Mendoza graduated in Modern Languages. “Songs of a Gypsy Soul” is her first poetry book. She works as an independent journalist and lecturer in art and culture, and has published her interviews, art and literature critiques in Persona, El Mundo and Sea Latino.
She has written several monographs. She is a Foreign Language teacher, Medical and Legal Interpreter, Art Curator, and Producer of artistic events. She is the founder and the Executive Director of Centro Cultural Hispano Americano. She is a member of Cigarra, HSO, Colombia Vive, Mujer Entre Letras, Mujeres Northwest and of the Sustainable Seattle Steering Committee. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Sultan Mohamed
www.seanet.com/~sulla/
Sultan Mohamd was born in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia in 1962 and has livedin Seattle, WA since 1982. He received his B.F.A. from the University of Washington in 1991, and a Teaching Certificate from Western Washington University in 1994. At present he is teaching art for the Seattle Public School District at Asa Mercer Middle School. In 1992, 1996, and 1998, Sultan had the opportunity to return to Ethiopia for the summer in order to study traditional paintings and frescos. His works include Love and Memory. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Ken Mochizuki
www.leeandlowbooks.com
Ken Mochizuki is the author of the young adult novel Beacon Hill Boys and the picture books Baseball Saved Us, Heroes, Passage to Freedom: the Sugihara Story, and Be Water, My Friend: the Early Years of Bruce Lee. He contributed to the anthologies On the Wings of Peace and A Different Battle: Stories of Asian Pacific American Veterans. Mochizuki also wrote Within the Silence, a performance piece about the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, for the Seattle-based Living Voices ; and a stage musical version of Baseball Saved Us for the 5th Avenue Theatre in Seattle.
Born and raised in Seattle, Washington, Mochizuki received a bachelor's degree in communications from the University of Washington and served as staff writer/editor for the Seattle newspapers International Examiner and Northwest Nikkei, with a special interest in the history and current issues of Americans of Asian/Pacific descent. In 1999, he was hired by the U.S. Army to give presentations on the history of Asian/Pacific Americans in the U.S. military.
As an author and free-lance writer, he is also now working again as an assistant editor with the International Examiner, and travels extensively to speak to students, teachers and librarians about his work. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Ken Morrow, MD
Ken Morrow is a retired ophthalmologist who was in practice for 43 years before retiring in 2004. With time on his hands he decided to write a memoir, A Boyhood in Nelson, Growing up during the Depression. He thought people would be interested in the Depression. He self published his book in December 2003 and, to his amazement, sold 300 copies in three months—and a total of more than 2,000 copies to date. He has had four editions printed including a large-print edition. The book is still selling well.
His second book, Leaving Nelson, Beyond Toad Mountain, was printed in October 2006 and is selling well. His third book, Ladies of Easy Virtue in the West Kootenay, An evolution and comparison (working title) will be ready for printing in October 2007. His third book, Baby Boomers, Retire Early—but with great care (working title) will be printed in 2008. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Maria de Lourdes Victoria Muguira
www.mlvictoriamuguira.com
Maria de Lourdes Victoria Muguira is the author of Les Dejo el Mar, which is based on the author's family history. The novel tells the story of a Mexican family's odyssey, patched together from the author's memories of those who were there as she was growing up and the stories they passed down to the next generation.
Les Dejo el Mar was a finalist of the 2006 Mariposa Book Award and received third place as the 2006 Best Historical Novel written in Spanish by a Latino woman. The author's collections of short stories, as well as her illustrated children's books, have been the recipients of the James W. Hall for Fiction award from the University of Washington and the Jimmy Knudsen Memorial award from Pacific Lutheran University.
A native from Veracruz, Mexico, Maria de Lourdes Victoria Muguira received her bachelor's degree in English Literature and Creative Writing from the University of Washington. She later earned her Juris Doctorate degree from that same institution. She has been a writer in residence of the prestigious institution, Hedgebrook, a non-profit foundation in Langley, Washington dedicated to further the writings of woman throughout the world.
Maria de Lourdes Victoria Muguira is currently writing her second novel and a handful of short stories. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Lensey Namioka
www.lensey.com
Lensey Namioka is the author of Mismatch, a romance story about a 15-year-old Chinese-American girl who is attracted to a Japanese-American boy and the conflicts that arise due to the cultural history and differences. Namioka is also the author of numerous children's books, including The Laziest Boy in the World, The Samurai and the Long Nose Devils, Yang the Youngest and his Terrible Ear. Her works have earned the Washington State Governor's Writers Award and the American Library Associations Top Ten Books List for Young Readers three times, as well as Parents Choice Award, Parents Choice Gold Medal, and California Young Reader Medal.
Namioka attended Radcliffe College and the University of California, Berkeley, where she majored in mathematics. She later moved to New York and taught at Wells College. Namioka moved to Seattle, where she currently resides, when her husband accepted a position at the University of Washington. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Carolyn V. Parnell
www.doowron.com
Carolyn V. Parnell is a native of Selma, Alabama. She resides in Renton, Washington with her spouse, Ernest and five children. She has five grandchildren. A love for people has kept her involved in her community for many years. Because of her involvement, she was nominated for a "Citizen of the Year" award. She recieved the "Outstanding Citizen" award, 2003. She is the author of the novel Still My Tremblin' Soul.^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Bob Santos
Bob Santos is often referred to as the unofficial ‘Mayor of the International District." ‘Uncle Bob' has a long and illustrious history of leadership and community activism in the International District community. Growing up as a child in the neighborhood and returning in many career positions and volunteer capacities, and he is credited for bringing in millions of dollars of housing, community services and neighborhood improvements to the neighborhood over the past three to four decades. He has received scores of local and national awards and published Hum Bows Not Hot Dogs, which chronicles the rich history of community activism in the International District. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Linda Dalal Sawaya
www.lindasawaya.com
Linda Dalal Sawaya
is the youngest of five daughters of Lebanese immigrants. She is an artist and writer, and has recently published a new and revised edition of her popular cookbook, Alice's Kitchen: Traditional Lebanese Cooking . The book is full of recipes and generously seasoned with memoir and family stories, as well as historic photos. Her artwork has been published on covers or in Arab American titles such as The Space Between our Footsteps, Food for Our Grandmothers, My Grandmother's Cactus, and Khalil Gibran: His Life and World She has illustrated two children's books, and writes, teaches art, cooks, and gardens in Portland , Oregon . Sawaya works in a variety of media including photography, ceramics, oil, acrylic, collage, watercolor, and egg tempera. Her work, which has been exhibited in Oregon , Washington , California , and New York can be viewed on her website. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Nisi Shawl
www.sfwa.org/members/shawl
Nisi Shawl is the co-author, with Cynthia Ward, of Writing the Other: A Practical Approach, from Aqueduct Press. Her short stories have been widely published, including in Asimov's SF, Strange Horizons, and Infinite Matrix, and reprinted in The Year's Best Fantasy & Horror, Volume 19. Her reviews and essays have appeared regularly in the Seattle Times since the turn of the millennium, and she is a contributor to The Encyclopedia of Themes in Science Fiction and Fantasy.
Raised in Kalamazoo, Michigan, Shawl attended the University of Michigan's Residential College, where she took courses in French, Oral History, and Cosmology. She further developed her passion for writing after attending the Clarion West Writer's Workshop. The experience motivated Shawl to move to the Seattle area.
She is currently a board member for Clarion West, as well as a founding member of the Carl Brandon Society, an organization dedicated to improving the representation of people of color within the fantastic genres. Shawl has also been a guest speaker at Stanford University, Smith College, and the Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Frederick Su
www.bytewrite.com
Frederick Su is the author of several published short stories and many articles, including most recently, "If you become stranded like James Kim," published in the NW Asian Weekly. He graduated from Utah State University with a B.S. in physics and went into the U.S. Marine Corps in November 1969. A back injury prevented him from going to Vietnam, possibly sparing his life, and giving him impetus to write his award-winning novel, An American Sin. The gist of the novel came about when a fellow Marine confessed his killing of a Mama-san and baby while on patrol in Vietnam. "How does one live with that?" Su asked himself. Examining that question fueled his passion for writing the novel.
Su earned a Master's and then Ph.D. in theoretical physics from the University of Connecticut. After graduation, he and his future wife bicycled across the U.S. to get the cobwebs out of his brain. When he turned 40, he exchanged his equations for words. He worked as a freelance writer/consultant for SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering, for 13 years. He honed his writing/editing skills there, writing technology articles. Meanwhile, he joined a writing class at Bellingham Vocational Technical Institute (now Bellingham Technical College) where he wrote the rough draft of An American Sin. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Indu Sundaresan
www.indusundaresan.com.
Indu Sundaresan was born and brought up in India and came to the US for graduate school. She is the author of three novels-- The Twentieth Wife (2002), The Feast of Roses (2003) and The Splendor of Silence (2006). All the three novels, in hardcover and paperback, were published by imprints of Simon & Schuster. The Twentieth Wife won the 2003 Washington State Book Award.
Indu has an undergraduate degree in economics from India and graduate degrees in Operations Research and Economics from the University of Delaware. In her avatar as a novelist (and not any longer an economist) she has judged the 2006 short story contest Katha for India Currents and Khabar magazines, and will do so again this year.
The Splendor of Silence will be published in paperback in September 2007. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP

Kim-Marie Walker
www.onyxcommunications.com
Kim-Marie Walker is the author of Zebras from Heaven, Celebrating Interethnic Relationships - One couple's journey transcending issues of race. This memoir is a bold journey inside Walker 's marriage to a 'white' man, where race-centric issues are used to deepen intimacy. Whispers, Shadows, and Seashells - Poems, Essays & Stories gets published June 2007. Evolving Blackness: A Multiethnic Sister's Journey into the Wilderness of Racial Self-Healing, is slated for release Fall 2008. A former geoscientist, Walker is published internationally. Fiction novels are on the horizon. Born and raised in Minnesota , Ms. Walker has called Alaska home for twenty-four years, in-between global treks. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Sasha Su-Ling Welland
www.sashawelland.com
Sasha Su-Ling Welland is the author of A Thousand Miles of Dreams: The Journeys of Two Chinese Sisters , a dual biography of her grandmother and great-aunt, a doctor and writer took very different paths in their quest to be independent women. Welland received a PhD in Anthropology from the University of California Santa Cruz and is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Women Studies at the University of Washington in Seattle. The Artist Trust, Blue Mountain Center, Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, Hedgebrook Retreat for Women Writers, and Millay Colony for the Arts have supported her writing. ^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
Shawn Wong
Shawn Wong is the author of American Knees, which is a romantic comedy about cross-cultural identities. A film version of the novel was created, titled "Americanese".. The film won several film festival awards and Wong served as associate producer. "Americanese" will be released in theaters by IFC Films in Summer 2007. Wong's first novel, Homebase (Reed and Cannon, 1979; reissued by Plume/NAL, 1990), won both the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award and the 15 th Annual Governor's Writers Day Award of Washington.
Wong received his undergraduate degree in English at the University of California at Berkeley and a Master's Degree in Creative Writing at San Francisco State University. He has taught at several colleges and universities since 1972, including Mills College, University of California at Santa Cruz and San Francisco State University.
Wong is currently Professor of English and Director of the University Honors Program at the University of Washington where he served as Chair of the Department of English from 1997 to 2002 and Director of the Creative Writing Program from 1995 to 1997. He is also the co-editor and editor of six Asian American and American multicultural literary anthologies.^RETURN TO LIST OF AUTHORS -- TOP
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