Lorene Delany-Ullman’s (’98, ’14) book of prose poems, Camouflage for the Neighborhood, won the 2011 Sentence Award. She recently published her poetry and creative nonfiction in Citric Acid, Zócalo Public Square, and TAB: A Journal of Poetry & Poetics. The following anthologies have included her work: Orange County, A Literary Field Guide, Bared: Contemporary Poetry and Art on Bras and Breasts, Beyond Forgetting: Poetry and Prose about Alzheimer’s Disease, and Alternatives to Surrender. Her manuscript, The Grief Contest, was a finalist for the 2023 Louise Bogan Award (Trio Press) and the 2020 Four Way Books Levis Prize in Poetry. She works with artist Jody Servon on Saved: Objects of the Dead, a photographic and poetic exploration of the human experience of life, death, and memory. Excerpts from their collaborative project have been published in AGNI, Tupelo Quarterly, Tarpaulin Sky, Palaver, and Lunch Ticket and exhibited nationwide in over thirty museums, galleries, and libraries. Saved: Objects of the Dead, as a book was published by Artsuite in January 2023. Delany-Ullman currently teaches writing at the University of California, Irvine.