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 Liza Dalby is an anthropologist and a novelist. She is the only westerner to have become a geisha, which she did in the course of researching her book, Geisha. She has also written Kimono Fashioning Culture, a view of Japanese culture through dress. Her first novel, The Tale of Murasaki, was published in Spring 2000.
 
Dame Darcy is a freelance illustrator and the creator of the comic book "Meat Cake." She has also appeared as an actress in independent films and her music has been released in the U.S. England, Japan, and elsewhere. Her website is www.damedarcy.com.
 
Trinie Dalton is a writer and visual artist in Los Angeles. She coedited Dear New Girl or Whatever Your Name Is for McSweeney?, and her short story collection Wide Eyed was recently published by Akashic Books.
 
John Darnielle is lead singer of the Mountain Goats, who are currently on tour. He writes about music here and talks about marriage, pornography and bubble tea here. The New Yorker recently called him "America's best non-hip-hop lyricist." If you haven't bought his latest album yet, you really should.
 
Meghan Daum is the author of My Misspent Youth, a collection of essays.
 
Stacia J. N. Decker grew up on a Kansas wheat farm, went to college in Washington, DC, and is currently an MFA candidate at Columbia University, where professors familiar with her autobiographical work have called her "arrogant," "whiny," "indoctrinated" and "repressed."
 
Nina de Gramont is the author of a collection of short stories, Of Cats and Men. She has stories this autumn in The Cream City Review and The Canary River Review. She lives on Cape Cod with her husband, David Gessner.
 
 Melissa de la Cruz is originally from Manila and now lives in New York City. She graduated from Columbia University with a degree in English and Art History. She has contributed to Feed, The New York Press, The San Francisco Chronicle and other publications.
 
Katrina del Mar photographs people: tattooed women, rock stars, transgendered punk rockers shaving in the bathtub and so forth. She publishes Plushtoy Catalog.
 
 Marisa de los Santos holds an M.F.A. from Sarah Lawrence College and a Ph.D. in Literature and Creative Writing from the University of Houston. Her poems have been published in Antioch Review, Poetry, Southwest Review and other magazines. Her book, From the Bones Out, was published in the 1999 James Dickey Contemporary Poetry Series from the University of South Carolina Press. She lives in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
 
Mark Dery is the author of Pyrotechnic Insanitarium: American Culture on the Brink and Escape Velocity: Cyberculture at the End of the Century.
 
  Jeniffer DeMeritt is a comedian, pseudo-intellectual and reluctant smut-peddler. She has performed at HERE, The Westbeth Theater Center, Gotham Comedy Club, The Atlantic Theater and numerous dives and art-holes in New York City. Her writing has been featured in Bust magazine.
 
Rachel DeWoskin spent five years in Beijing as a consultant and television producer. She now teaches poetry, analytical and business writing at Boston University and the Harvard Extension School. She is working on her first book, Blind China Diaries.
 
Julian Dibbell writes a column on technological obsession for FEED. He is also the author of My Tiny Life: Crime and Passion in a Virtual World, a Village Voice "Writers on the Verge" selection for 1998. A former long-time resident of New York City, he now lives in South Bend, Indiana, with his wife and a shockingly low monthly housing expense.
 
Giovanni Paolo di Mola is a still-life and portrait photographer. He lives in New York.
 
 Betty Dodson has taught thousands of women and men how to enhance their sexual expression through her Bodysex Workshops, her current book, Sex for One: The Joy of Selfloving, and her previous books, Liberating Masturbation and Selflove & Orgasm. She distributes her own erotic sex-education videos, Selfloving and Celebrating Orgasm, and manages her own web site, www.bettydodson.com. She lives in New York City with her chosen family of sexual friends.
 
Mary Donnelly was born and raised in San Pedro, California. Her poetry has appeared in Open City and Bleach. She has also co-written two feature-length screenplays and works as a writer/producer for Internet television.
 
Maura Donohoe is a writer living in New York.
 
Lesley Dormen is a writer based in New York. Her work has appeared in Mirabella, Glamour and many other magazines.
 
Adam Drucker is a comedian based in Los Angeles. His one-man show, Playland, played off-Broadway in New York for one year. He has also appeared on television and in commercials.
 
Amy Dryansky's first collection of poems How I Got Lost So Close to Home won the Alice James Books' New England/New York Competition. Her poems appear in The New England Review, DoubleTake, Marlboro Review and elsewhere. Currently, she's working on a collection of short-shorts (fiction, not hot pants).
 
 Andre Dubus III is the author of a collection of short fiction, The Cage Keeper and Other Stories, the novel Bluesman, and House of Sand and Fog, from which "A Caring Rescue" is taken. He has published in a variety of magazines (and been reprinted in both the Best American Short Stories and Best American Essays series) and has won a Pushcart Prize and the National Magazine Award for Fiction among other prizes. He is also an actor and a carpenter, and is married to dancer/choreographer Fontaine Dollas. They live in Massachusetts with their three children.
 
Denise Duhamel is the author of ten books and chapbooks of poetry. Her most recent titles include The Star-Spangled Banner (winner of the Crab Orchard Poetry Prize, 1999), Kinky and Girl Soldier. She has been writing poems with Maureen Seaton for about ten years. Their collaborations have appeared in such magazines as Boston Review, Prairie Schooner, Indiana Review and American Voice. Their first collaborative book, Exquisite Politics, was published in 1997.
 
Katia Dunn is an associate editor at the Portland Mercury newspaper, an excellent rag specializing in smut and gossip. She is also the owner of a dog named Billy, a black and tan coonhound who bays very loudly.
 
 Christopher Durang is a playwright and sometimes actor. His plays include "A History of the American Film" (Tony nomination, Best Book of a Musical), "Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All For You" (Obie Award), "Beyond Therapy," "Baby with the Bathwater" (Obie Award, Dramatists Guild Hull Warriner Award), "The Marriage of Bette and Boo," "Laughing Wild," "Durang/Durang" and most recently, "Sex and Longing" at Lincoln Center. As an actor, he's performed in his cabaret Chris Durang and Dawne, the Sondheim musical Putting It Together with Julie Andrews, and in various movies, including The Secret of My Success, Mr. North, The Butcher's Wife and Housesitter. Durang is the recipient of a Guggenheim, a Rockefeller, the CBS Playwriting Fellowship and the Lila Wallace Reader's Digest Writers Award.
 
Geoff Dyer's books include But Beautiful (winner of a 1992 Somerset Maugham Prize), Out of Sheer Rage (finalist for a National Book Critics Circle Award), and, most recently, Paris Trance. He looks forward to spending more of his life in (very expensive) hotels.


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