Giano Cromley was born in Montana and grew up in the shadows of the Beartooth Mountain Range. For his undergraduate studies, he went to Dartmouth College, majoring in literature and creative writing. His first port of call after college was Washington, DC, where he started off answering phones and ended up working as a speechwriter and deputy press secretary for U.S. Senator Max Baucus. But after four years of the political grind, it was time to refocus on what he'd wanted to do all along: write.
He left DC to pursue his MFA, studying fiction at the University of Montana. Three years later, it was time to hit the big city, and Chicago fit the bill. He managed to find part-time work teaching GED and ESL classes on the city's South and West Sides. Much to his surprise, he turned out to be a pretty good teacher. Eventually, he got hired to teach composition and literature at Kennedy-King College, one of the City Colleges of Chicago.
He's the author of The Last Good Halloween (Tortoise Books), which was a finalist for the High Plains Book Awards. His other writing - both fiction and nonfiction - has appeared in The Threepenny Review, Literal Latte, the German edition of Le Monde diplomatique, The Externalist, Swill Magazine, Word Riot, The Summerset Review, Underground Voices, Zouch Magazine, and The Bygone Bureau. He's also been featured on the podcasts "Anything Ghost" and "WordPlaySound." In 2008, he was honored to receive an Artists Fellowship from the Illinois Arts Council. In addition, he does a variety of freelance writing projects, primarily for textbook publishers.
He lives on the South Side of Chicago with his wife and two dogs. You can follow him on Twitter at @gianoc, or via his webpage at www.gianocromley.com.