Elizabeth Bradfield
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Author and naturalist Elizabeth Bradfield grew up in Tacoma, Washington and earned her MFA from the University of Alaska, Anchorage. Theorem, her collaboration with artist Antonia Contro, was released as a fine art book from Candor Arts in 2019, and is available as a trade edition from Poetry Northwest (2020). She is also the author of Toward Antarctica (Boreal Books/Red Hen Press, 2019); Once Removed (Persea Books, 2015); Approaching Ice (Persea Books, 2010), finalist for the James Laughlin Prize from the Academy of American Poets; and Interpretive Work (Arktoi Books/Red Henn Press, 2008), which was awarded the Audre Lorde Award and was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award. Her work has appeared numerous anthologies including Reading Queer: Poetry in a time of Crisis (Anhinga Press, 2018) and This Assignment is So Gay: lgbtiq poets on the art of teaching (Sibling Rivalry, 2013).
Bradfield has received a Wallace Stegner Fellowship, a Bread Loaf Scholarship, and was a resident at the Vermont Studio Center. She is the founder and editor in chief of Broadsided Press, as well as a contributing editor at the Alaska Quarterly Review. Bradfield is currently associate professor and codirector of Creative Writing at Brandeis University. She lives on Cape Cod in Massachusetts, with her partner.