Editors
Founder & Editor-in-Chief
Madeleine Moon-Chun
Madeleine Moon-Chun (she/her) is a young writer from Georgia. A Scholastic Art & Writing Awards national medalist, she is a poetry editor for Eucalyptus Lit and is published or forthcoming in Fleeting Daze and Mukoli: The Magazine For Peace. Her poetry collection Not Made of Lines: Poetic Meditations on Time, Space, & Other Matters was published by Eastwind Books of Berkeley. She loves writing due to its ability to showcase the most beautiful and vulnerable parts of being human.
Managing Editor & Lead Tech
Benjamin Moon-Chun
Benjamin Moon-Chun (he/him) is a high school freshman from Georgia. He is a winner of the international Nicholas A. Virgilio Memorial Haiku Competition and has been recognized by the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards for his flash fiction and poetry. He enjoys neologisms and is currently working on a mystery novel.
Advisory Board
Dr. Virginia Loh-Hagan
Dr. Virginia Loh-Hagan is the inaugural Executive Director for AANAPISI (Asian American Native American Pacific Islander Serving Institution) and the Director of the Asian Pacific Islander Desi American (APIDA) Center at San Diego State University. She is also the Founder and Chair of the SDSU APIDA Employee Resource Group. She has a B.A. in English and a Masters in Elementary Education (K-8) and Special Education, specializing in Learning Disabilities (K-12), from the University of Virginia. She earned her Doctorate in Education with an emphasis in Literacy from SDSU-USD in May 2008 She has authored over 450 children's books and has several academic publications about using multicultural children and young adult literature. Most of her books and research address APIDA themes. She is serving on various book award committees and is the Cover Editor and Book Nook columnist for "The California Reader," the premiere professional journal for the California Reading Association. She is also serving as the Co-Executive Director and Director of Curriculum Development for The Asian American Education Project; she is committed to ensuring APIDA histories and narratives are taught in K-12 and beyond.
Sophia Huynh
Sophia Huynh is a senior at Columbia University pursuing a degree in Political Science and a minor in East Asian Language Studies. Involved in a multitude of organizing events centered around the diaspora of the Asian American experience, she is the senior advisor of Columbia's Asian American Alliance as well as the recruitment chair for Columbia's Asian Pacific American Heritage Month (APAHM). With an ambition to spotlight Asian American voices and highlight how journalism and literature can change the American perspective, she is honored to be a part of the advisory board of Student Pedagogies of Asian America.