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Contributors


Elisabeth Kinsey (who pens the column “Sex in the Garden”) teaches writing online, lives in New York, pines away for Half Moon Bay and publishes in The Denver Post and various journals. Her hands are imminently dirty. She may or may not be related to the late Dr. Alfred Kinsey.


Dianne Kornberg’s photography and photo-based work has been exhibited nationally and internationally for more than two decades. She is represented in numerous museum, public and private collections; her work is the subject of two monographs, and is included in several anthologies. She is a Professor Emerita at Pacific Northwest College of Art in Portland, Or- egon, and has her studio in the San Juan Islands in Washington State.


Rachael Kloster is a fine artist currently pursuing a MFA in Fort Collins, Colorado. Rachael says she’s delighted to have the opportunity to collaborate on Greenwoman Magazine as it keeps her connected with the pulse of the community and in sync with her lifelong environ- mental focus. Her sensibility towards stewardship of the earth manifests in gardening, activ- ism, art making and, most importantly, being a whole mother and human being.


Kathleen Lindemann (who has a book review and art featured in this issue) is currently a Journalism Major and a tutor at Pikes Peak community College. She loves naure and writing. “Her experiences make her the unulitmate free-spirited woman,” says classmate Kristopher Poskey. “Her life depicts the story of many Americans after the post-1960s great depression, a life full of adventure.” She earned her degree in Environmental Technology in 1997. Her new passion is to lead people to the better future of green living, through research and writing.


Leslie Martin (who writes the column “Crunchy Betty”) is a full-time blogger and freelance writer from quirky Manitou Springs, CO. She regularly puts food on her face for her blog, Crunchy Betty, and has published one book—Crunchy Betty’s Food on Your Face for Acne and Oily Skin—but remains furiously typing away at her next three. After a brief stint as a professional model, Leslie now champions the idea that beauty is in everything and everyone, and that conscious living is the only way to a peaceful, happier future.


Poet Carolyn Moore’s three chapbooks won their respective competitions, as has her book- length collection, Instructions for Traveling Light, pending publication as winner of the Deep Bowl Press Poetry Prize. She taught at Humboldt State University (Arcata, California) until able to eke out a living as a freelance writer and researcher. She now lives on the last vestige of the family farm, where she installed an 8’ deer fence to protect her flower and vegetable gardens but still shares the 25-tree orchard with the cloven-hoofed marauders.


Dan Murphy (who writes the column “Slow Ride”) is a seasoned zine writer (The Juniper, Elephant Mess) and proponent of the slow life. His long-time passions include bike riding, skateboarding, punk rock, and gardening. His new interests include botany, ecology, wild- flowers, and lichens. Dan has a B.S. in horticulture and is pursuing an M.S. in biology involv- ing a thesis on green roof technology research. http://www.juniperbug.blogspot.com


Winter/Spring 2012 greenwomanmagazine.com 5


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