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Lisa Gabriele's writing has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Salon, Hooksexup, Vice, and The Washington Post. She directs and shoots documentaries for The Life Network, The History Channel and the CBC. Her first novel, Tempting Faith DiNapoli, was published by Simon and Schuster. She lives in Toronto, where she's at work on the second book.
 
Francesca Galliani was born in Milan, Italy, and came to the United States when she was nineteen. Her photographs have been published in Detour, Glamour, Cosmopolitan, Vogue, Out and others. She has exhibited her work widely in Italy.
 
Mary Gaitskill grew up outside of Detroit. She is the author of two collections of short stories, Bad Behavior and Because They Wanted To, the novel Two Girls, Fat and Thin and numerous articles and stories.
 
Ondine Galsworth is working on a novel about her experiences as a go-go dancer. A New York native, she now lives in New Jersey.
 
David Ganulin is beginning to wonder why the hell he came back to America in the first place. When not doing that, he's editing martial arts books and articles for YMAA Press, Black Belt magazine and Martial Arts Training magazine.
 
Alberto García-Alix is a devotee of motorcycles and tattoos; an aficionado of bullfighting and underground art; a publisher of poetry books and the cultural journal, El Canto de la Tripulación; and the foremost photographer to emerge from Spain's La Movida, the post-Franco era of free, and often flamboyant, individual expression. His work has been published in the leading magazines of Spain and featured in solo and group exhibitions in galleries and museums in Madrid, Seville, Valencia, Barcelona, Brussels and London. In 1998, a survey exhibition of his career to-date was presented at El Círculo de Bellas Artes in Madrid during the inaugural edition of the annual photography festival, PhotoEspaña.
 
Jeffrey Gardner is a native of Los Angeles. After graduating with a B.A. in Design from UCLA, he embarked on a career as a painter and nightclubber before stumbling into fashion styling. After ten years of pinning frocks, Jeffrey picked up a camera and finally found some contentment. His aesthetic is informed by Asbury Park, Las Vegas, the Tenderloin and inexpensive motels. He also loves the people who love these places.
 
Charles Gatewood's photography has been supported by three fellowships from the New York State Council on the Arts, awards from the American Institute of Graphic Arts, the Art Directors' Club and Photographer's Forum, as well as the Leica Medal of Excellence for Outstanding Humanisitic Photojournalism. His books include Charles Gatewood, Sidetripping (with William S. Burroughs), Wall Street, Primitives and True Blood. A longtime New Yorker, Gatewood now resides in San Francisco, where his visual research continues.
 
Elena Georgiou is the winner of a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship and the Astraea Foundation's Emerging Writer's Award. Her work has been published in various literary journals and anthologies. She has recently published a poetry collection entitled Mercy Mercy Me and a poetry anthology (co-edited with Michael Lassell) entitled The World In Us, from St. Martin's Press. She teaches creative writing at Hunter College and City College.
 
Amy Gerstler's most recent books of poems are Crown of Weeds and Medicine. She teaches in the writing program at Antioch University West in Los Angeles, and at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena.
 
Panagiotis Gianopoulos is an editor at Bloomsbury Press, where he edits novelist and fellow Hooksexup contributor, J.T. LeRoy. He has also just finished writing a novel himself.
 
Maureen Gibbon is a graduate of Barnard College and the Iowa Writer's Workshop, where she was awarded a teaching/writing fellowship. Her poetry manuscript, "Kicking Horse My True Husband," was a finalist in the Yale Series of Younger Poets and the National Poetry Series in 1994 and 1995. Twice the recipient of Minnesota's Loft-McKnight Artist Fellowship, she lives in Minneapolis and northwestern Minnesota. Her first novel, Sweet Swimming Arrow, was published by Little, Brown in May 2000.
 
Ralph Gibson's photographs are in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the National Gallery in Washington, D.C. and other museums and galleries throughout the world. He has been awarded a Guggenheim and three National Endowment for the Arts fellowships. In his spare time, he plays the electric guitar.
 
Amit Gilboa was born in Israel, grew up in the US, and is based in Singapore. Working as a writer has taken him to such freaky and exotic locations as Phnom Penh, Saigon, Bangkok and San Francisco. He is the author of Off the Rails in Phnom Penh, which explores the sex, drugs and violence of contemporary Phnom Penh. You can visit him at offtherails.com.
 
Austin writer Spike Gillespie is the author of All the Wrong Men and One Perfect Boy: A Memoir (Simon and Schuster, 1999). She has written for GQ, Playboy, Elle, Salon, Texas Monthly and The Austin Chronicle, amongst others. You can find her at home on the Web at www.spikeg.com.
 
Eric Gillin, weaned in a suburb south of Boston, is a staff writer for TheStreet.com, where he is widely recognized as the indoor hang-gliding champion. In his spare time he walks the streets at night. He goes where eagles dare.
 
Fiona Giles was born and raised in Australia and educated at Oxford, where she specialized in nineteenth-century literature. She is the editor of Dick for a Day: What Would You Do If You Had One?
 
Jennifer Gilmore is a Brooklyn-based writer whose work has appeared in various magazines and journals, including Alaska Quarterly Review, Allure, BookForum, CutBank, The Seattle Weekly, The Stranger and Time Out New York.
 
Ian Gittler wrote and photographed Pornstar, an examination of life at the epicenter of America's multi-billion dollar sex entertainment industry.
 
John Glassie was born and raised in the Washington, D.C. area, went to Johns Hopkins University and lives in New York. A former propaganda artist, he frequently writes for The New York Times Magazine and has contributed to a range of other publications, including Newsday, Salon and Art & Antiques.
   
  Glenn Glasser: I always wait for others to get off the subway car before entering — my grandparents introduced me to moby by buying me 'play' — in grade school we got a day off for the first day of deer hunting and trout seasons — I will travel anywhere on a rumor of good sweetbreads — and my interest in photography began in the 6th grade with my kodak disc camera as i was suspended for documenting our 'truth or dare' game held in the back of the bus on a trip returning from Gettysburg.
 
Lisa Glatt’s work has appeared in such magazines as Mississippi Review, Other Voices, Columbia, Indiana Review, Pearl, and The Sun. In 2003 she received the Mississippi Review Prize for fiction. She currently teaches at California State University, Long Beach and is married to poet and visual artist David Hernandez. A Girl Becomes a Comma Like That is her first novel. Visit her website at www.lisaglatt.com.
 
  Besides appearing in such fetish magazines as Skin Two and Marquis, Steve Diet Goedde's work has been featured in such photography-oriented publications as Zoom and La Fotografia Actual. His photographs appeared in a group show along with the work of Robert Mapplethorpe, Brett Weston and Jan Saudek in February of 1999 at the BGH Gallery.
 
Jonathan Goldstein's writing has appeared in ReadyMade, The Carolina Quarterly, Land-Grant and The New York Times. His first novel, Lenny Bruce is Dead, was published in America this spring. He was born in Brooklyn and lives in Montreal.
 
Richard Goldstein is executive editor of The Village Voice, where he has been writing about culture, politics and sexuality for more than thirty years. His books include The Poetry of Rock and Reporting the Counterculture. He can be contacted by email at .
 
Amy Goodman is a Manhattan-based freelance writer and a film and television producer. Her credits include the final segment of ABC's The Century and Treasure Island, a feature film that won the Special Jury Prize for Distinctive Vision in Filmmaking at the 1999 Sundance Film Festival. She writes for Filmmaker Magazine,The Independent Film & Video Monthly and indieWIRE, and is working on a Nicholas Hytner film about ballet dancers.
 
Janine Gordon studied art and writing at The Cooper Union and New York University. Her work has been seen in various shows around the world. She had her first solo show at the John Gibson Gallery in 1995. She is working on two new series: "Hardcore Hip-Hop" and "Boy Stories." She has written reviews and articles for Flash Art and works occasionally for XXL and Blaze magazine as a freelance photographer. You can check out her site at https://www.thing.net/~janine.
 
Greg Gorman's celebrity photography appears regularly in publications such as GQ, L'Uomo Vogue, Life, Esquire, Us, Interview, Vanity Fair and Rolling Stone. He has also produced award-winning ad campaigns for L.A. Eyeworks, Coca-Cola and Levi's, and agencies such as Young & Rubicam and Leo Burnett. Collections of his work include Greg Gorman Volume One and Greg Gorman Volume Two, Visual Aid, Inside Life and As I See It. Gorman was educated at the University of Kansas and UCLA. He lives in Los Angeles.
 
Peter J. Gorman was born in 1961 in Binghamton, NY. He moved with his wife Rachel to New York City in 1994 and began photographing nude models in his apartment. He had his first book published in 2001 - "Naked in Apartment 7" (Goliath Books) and his second book published in 2002 - "Naked Rooms" (Goliath Books). Peter Gorman's photographs have been published in Night, Hooksexup, Salon, Masquerade, Black Book, Max, Stern, LUI, Art Photo Akt and the Australian fine art photography magazine Black+White. His work has been included in the photographic anthologies Hooksexup / The New Nude (Chronicle Books) and Naked Women (Thunder Mouth Press).
 
San Francisco-based Performance Poet Daphne Gottlieb stitches together the ivory tower and the gutter just using her tongue. She is the author of Final Girl (Soft Skull Press, August 2003), Why Things Burn (Soft Skull Press, 2001) and Pelt (Odd Girls Press, 1999).
 
  Peter Gottlieb is the pseudonym of a somewhat well-known, heretofore respected writer who is enough of an exhibitionist to want more than anything to tell you who he is, but just can't. He has published in places you have heard of and places you haven't. His work has been translated into other languages, and he is the author of several books and the winner of some prizes of note.
 
Frédéric Goudal, a thirty-three-year-old Frenchman, has been in a serious committed relationship with photography for three years (they had just been dating the seven years prior to that). He's done the traditional framed-work-on-a-wall exhibitions in Bordeaux, but his main showcase is the Internet, where he doesn't have to play the Tartuffean "hide the nipple" game. Visit his own site, www.ifrance.com/filh/index.html, for more of his black & white nudes.
 
Thierry Le Gouès has published two books: Soul and Popular. Born in France and currently residing in New York and Paris, Le Gouès is a fashion photographer whose work is frequently published in Harper's Bazaar, Allure, Vogue, German Elle, Trace, Arena and Vogue Hommes International. His most recent campaign for Nike can be seen absolutely everywhere.
 
Photographer Katy Grannan asked her subjects for "Eye of the Beholder" not to wear makeup or style their hair she wanted to get closer to their vulnerabilities. "I thought any little awkwardness or imperfection was more poignant than an airbrush-perfect model," says Grannan, who has contributed to The New York Times Magazine, Visionaire and British Vogue and recently opened her first solo exhibit at Greenberg van Doren Fine Art in New York.
 
Camella Grace is a Los Angeles-based adventure seeker, photographer, filmmaker and computer geek. Email her at .
 
Julia Gray is a London-based political journalist who covers the post-Communist world. She has also been restaurant critic and leisure columnist for the Prague Business Journal.
 
Spalding Gray is a writer, actor, performer and the author of Swimming to Cambodia, Gray's Anatomy, Monster in a Box, Sex and Death to the Age Fourteen and It's a Slippery Slope, among other works. He has appeared on PBS and HBO and in numerous films, including The Killing Fields, True Stories and Gray's Anatomy. He passed away in 2004.
 
Lucy Grealy is a poet and the author of Autobiography of a Face. She attended the Iowa Writer's Workshop and has been a fellow at the Bunting Institute of Radcliffe and the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown.
 
Rachel Greene is the editor of Rhizome, a new media art publication. She recently curated "Some of My Favorite Web Sites are Art." She is not married but her parents are.
 
Ben Greenman is an editor at the New Yorker and the author of Superbad, a novel that is also a collection of short fiction and humor pieces. His work appears somewhat frequently in assorted publications.
 
Vanessa Grigoriadis is a contributing editor at New York magazine.
 
Amanda Griscom is a writer and assistant editor at Feed.
 
Michael Joseph Gross is the author of Starstruck: When a Fan Gets Close to Fame. He has written for the New York Times, the Boston Globe, the Atlantic Monthly, Entertainment Weekly, Elle, the Nation, and many other magazines and newspapers. He won the PEN/New England's 2002 Discovery Award for nonfiction. He lives in California.
 
Douglas Goetsch has written four collection of poems, including First Time Reading Freud, winner of the 2002 Permafrost Award. HeÍs published in many magazines nationally, including Poetry, The Iowa Review, Prairie Schooner and Ploughshares, and is included in the recent anthology from Random House, Poetry 180. He teaches creative writing to incarcerated teens at Passages Academy in The Bronx, and will answer mail, or sell you a book, at www.janestreet.com.
 
Catherine Guthrie's articles have appeared in Health, Self, Yoga Journal, Sunset, San Francisco magazine, Out, and Girlfriends. She lives in Louisville, Kentucky, where being a big queer is a daily adventure.
 
Pedro Juan Gutiérrez began his working life at the age of eleven, as an ice cream vendor and newsboy. The author of several published works of poetry, he lives in Havana, where he is employed as a magazine journalist.


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