About Us
Belletrista is a not-for-profit, bimonthly web magazine which seeks both to
encourage cross-cultural understanding through international literature written
by women and to increase the visibility of that literature.
Originally the brain child of Lois Ava-Matthew, Belletrista has been developed
and honed with the assistance of a remarkable international group of readers who came together as our
Board of Advisors, each bringing to the magazine special skills, talents and education.
Our initial group of writers and reviewers come from the US, UK, continental Europe,
Canada, Ireland, Australia and South Africa, a list that is expanding.
We approach our mission as readers, not as academics or book industry professionals.
Belletrista hopes to bring its unique view of women-authored, global literature to a
broad audience of international booklovers, from the seasoned fan of world literature
to the passionate reader who is just venturing beyond familiar literary shores.
A majority of our content is freelance-written. Writers should note that we do not
accept submissions of original fiction or poetry. We do not accept unsolicited material
of any kind; however, if you think you have something to contribute to our magazine please feel
free to contact us and inquire.
Belletrista acknowledges the early and continuing support, financial and otherwise, of
the Matthew family, The Toadstool Bookshop of Milford, NH, USA; and the
generosity of many of its writers and advisors.
Contributors in this Issue
Kathleen Ambrogi is an American who has spent most of her life abroad, in Europe,
Africa and Southeast Asia. After earning her M.S. in English Education, she taught
English, Social Science, Art and Information Technology in schools around the world.
Today she is a professional writer, sharing her impressions of cultural forces
through fiction and nonfiction.
Andy Barnes lives in Bristol in the United Kingdom. He is an avid reader on a mission
to discover great writing from as many parts of the globe as possible. Andy works in
one bookshop, and volunteers in another, and when he isn't reading or selling books,
he is usually talking or writing about them.
Rachael Beale has spent much of her career to date experimenting with combinations of
words and technology, either writing for technical companies, or doing technical things for
literary ones. She graduated from the University of Cambridge's Trinity College with an M.A.
allegedly in "English Literature;" actual English writers account for quite a small proportion
of her reading, which tends to sprawl luxuriously across genre boundaries. She makes time to
read and talk about books by not doing things that normal people consider essential (sleeping,
cleaning, ironing...)
Tad Deffler spent the first quarter of his life (so far) moving around the world as an Army
brat, the second quarter of his life acquiring degrees he doesn’t use, the third quarter trying to
figure out what the fourth and subsequent quarters should be about, and the last quarter working for
a long series of companies without ever moving his desk as his tiny software company got acquired
by ever-larger ones. He lives in New Jersey but spends as much time in Ontario as he can wangle.
Simone Cornelisson is a composer and clarinetist living in New York City. When she's not working
on her graduate studies in music, she loves to read great literature, which she takes as inspiration
for most of her musical works.
Ceri Evans lives amidst the green green grass of North Wales. She is a family lawyer who prefers
reading to anything else. She would secretly love to drop everything and open a second hand book shop.
Caitlin Fehir is an English teacher living in southern Ontario, Canada.
Her reading tastes change daily, and she is constantly adding to her never-ending list of books
to explore. Her new-found love is traveling, an expensive hobby that is supplemented by seeing
the world through literature.
Akeela Gaibie-Dawood lives in the beautiful city of Cape Town, South Africa. She enjoys
nature and is a keen hiker. She loves books and the written word, and has a Masters degree
in journalism. Her current reading challenge is to visit as many countries around the world,
via books, as possible.
Rachel Hayes is a Brit living in Belgium. She reads a variety of mainly contemporary fiction,
and enjoys seeking out translated fiction from areas of the world her literary travels
haven't taken her to before. She attributes her interest in books written by women to an
early obsession with Little Women, What Katy Did and The Chalet School.
Jane Anderson Jones has been a community college professor of Literature and Humanities for
over 25 years. A resident of Sarasota, Florida, she has edited an anthology of Florida poetry and
has done the usual academic writing and paper presenting. She's beginning to think about retiring to
have more time to read and travel.
Tim Jones is an author, poet, editor and
anthologist who lives in Wellington, New Zealand. He is currently working on his second novel
and third collection of poetry. As a reader, he especially enjoys Russian and South American
literature in translation, poetry from New Zealand and around the world, and science fiction – plus
everything from Elizabeth Jane Howard novels to Buffy comics.
C. Lariviere is a French-Texan who has lived in Japan, Spain and Argentina. An aficionado
of languages (fluent in French, Spanish, English and Japanese), she is quick to pick up her suitcases
to travel the globe and explore sites unknown. With her recent M.S. in organic chemistry she currently
travels via books and awaits her next adventure. Her favorite fiction consists of Japanese and Latin
American literature.
Amanda Meale is a music teacher who loves to read. She lives near Sydney, Australia.
Meg Merrylees is an Australian reader living on the Murrumbidgee River with a husband and
three children, plenty of kangaroos and the odd literary echidna. Favourite Australian women
writers: Kate Grenville, Margo Lanagan and Christina Stead.
Kate Morgan is a former professional in the law enforcement and emergency services fields.
She is a voracious reader of a variety of books, both domestic and international..
Darryl Morris is a pediatrician who lives in Atlanta, Georgia (USA). Half of his days are
spent taking care of hospitalized children, and he uses his time off to travel in the US and
abroad, and to attend jazz and classical music concerts, plays, museum exhibits, and author
readings, whenever he isn't reading.
Joyce Nickel is a corporate writer from Vancouver, Canada. When she's not reading or
traveling, she can be found enjoying the outdoor lifestyle of the Pacific Northwest.
Maggie Oldendorf has a Masters degree in English Literature and a wide array of interests,
ranging from her longstanding regard for the soldier poets of World War I (who she discovered when
in the seventh grade) to her more recent enthusiasm for historical embroidery. She lives with her
family in a house filled with books somewhere north of New York City.
Jean Hughes Raber teaches college English and journalism in Michigan. She has a master's
degree with a concentration in medieval literature from Central Michigan University. The first
book she ever read by herself was "The Cat in the Hat. In 50 years of enthusiastic reading,
she has never found a more profound parable of totalitarian authority (Fish) vs.
joyful anarchy (Cat). Her heroes include Harpo Marx, Mother Jones, Dorothy Day, Studs Terkel,
and, of course, Dr. Seuss. She lives with her husband, son, and three joyfully anarchistic
cats, all of whom just stepped in on the mat one day and never left.
Charlotte Simpson lives in London. She reads a wide range of classic and contemporary
fiction written by women and is currently focusing on Africa. She has a Masters degree in
Modern British Women's History.
Dorothy Dudek Vinicombe has had careers in teaching, bookselling, publishing and writing.
Now that she is a freelancer she can do all four at the same time. Living in Auckland, New Zealand,
she can see three volcanoes (hopefully all extinct) from her office window. Books are her favourite
gift—to receive and to give—and she is thrilled that all three of her children are
voracious readers.
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