Jeannine Hall Gailey

Jeannine is a Seattle-area writer and editor.
Her third book, Unexplained Fevers, is forthcoming from Kitsune Books in 2013.
She teaches part-time at National University's MFA program and volunteers as an editorial consultant for Crab Creek Review.
Jeannine's work has appeared in Prairie Schooner, The Iowa Review and Crab Orchard Review and featured on NPR's The Writer's Almanac and Verse Daily. She reviews poetry books for outlets like The Rumpus and Rattle. In 2007 Jeannine was awarded a Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Prize and a Washington State Artist Trust GAP Grant.
She's currently at work on two more books of poetry and a memoir-in-progress. Read more at Jeannine's website. You will most often find her with her nose in a book about a futuristic dystopia by Margaret Atwood or Haruki Murakami.
Her third book, Unexplained Fevers, is forthcoming from Kitsune Books in 2013.
She teaches part-time at National University's MFA program and volunteers as an editorial consultant for Crab Creek Review.
Jeannine's work has appeared in Prairie Schooner, The Iowa Review and Crab Orchard Review and featured on NPR's The Writer's Almanac and Verse Daily. She reviews poetry books for outlets like The Rumpus and Rattle. In 2007 Jeannine was awarded a Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Prize and a Washington State Artist Trust GAP Grant.
She's currently at work on two more books of poetry and a memoir-in-progress. Read more at Jeannine's website. You will most often find her with her nose in a book about a futuristic dystopia by Margaret Atwood or Haruki Murakami.