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Maureen Alsop

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November 2017


Maureen Alsop is the winner of Harpur Palate's Milton Kessler Memorial Award, Bitter Oleander's Frances Locke Memorial Award, and Eleventh Muse' Poetry Prize. Her poetry has been thrice nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Her poems have appeared or pending in various journals including: Barrow Street, Columbia Journal, AGNI, among others. " ...more

Average rating: 4.5 · 60 ratings · 12 reviews · 20 distinct works
Apparition Wren

4.35 avg rating — 20 ratings — published 2007
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Mantic

4.89 avg rating — 9 ratings — published 2013 — 3 editions
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A Blade of Grass Made Bare ...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2012
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Later, Knives & Trees

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2014
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Pyre

4.33 avg rating — 3 ratings
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Nightingale Habit

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2006 — 2 editions
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Mirror Inside Coffin

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2015
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Mad to Live Erased

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it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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The Dream and The Dream You...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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Tender to Empress: Visual P...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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Maureen’s Recent Updates

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The One Who Was Standing Apart from Me by Maurice Blanchot
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The Last Man by Maurice Blanchot
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Maureen Alsop has read
The Last Man by Maurice Blanchot
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Molloy by Samuel Beckett
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Under the Sign of the Labyrinth by Christina Tudor-Sideri
"Under the Sign of the Labyrinth is one of the first three books I received as a part of my recent subscription to Sublunary Editions. Of the three, it is the one I felt most immediately drawn to, perhaps from its size and shape (akin to Nathanaël’s T" Read more of this review »
trenches parallax leapfrog by Ashim Shanker
“Look out the window of the train: you’re moving, but you can’t remember leaving. Jagged brown crater dwellings run across the landscape, pipes with thick black smoke pouring out. Smoke overflowing, as the buildings themselves are caked with a sort of black tar.
Evening sun peeks over the horizon through rusted steel water towers and other ancient skeletons. Their frames stand fixed, albeit hunched forward, anchored in by the ankles in scrap iron dunes that stretch for miles with frigid desert rats scurrying through as giant shivering Scarabs hover in the sky: wired-in and vigilant, murmuring ancient mantras, overshadowing newer, but desperately cruel partisan inscriptions of code in the soot-stained brick facade.

Look at your superimposed reflection in the window across from your seat and envision subatomic particles acquiring sentience in the vacuum of an Accelerator. All wondering how it is they got there, who it is they presume to be.

Always wondering. Spiraling...really! Always spira
...more
Ashim Shanker
Maureen Alsop rated a book it was amazing
A Blade of Grass Made Bare by Its Own Anatomy by Maureen  Alsop
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Under the Sign of the Labyrinth by Christina Tudor-Sideri
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Disembodied by Christina Tudor-Sideri
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More of Maureen's books…
Ashim Shanker
“Look out the window of the train: you’re moving, but you can’t remember leaving. Jagged brown crater dwellings run across the landscape, pipes with thick black smoke pouring out. Smoke overflowing, as the buildings themselves are caked with a sort of black tar.
Evening sun peeks over the horizon through rusted steel water towers and other ancient skeletons. Their frames stand fixed, albeit hunched forward, anchored in by the ankles in scrap iron dunes that stretch for miles with frigid desert rats scurrying through as giant shivering Scarabs hover in the sky: wired-in and vigilant, murmuring ancient mantras, overshadowing newer, but desperately cruel partisan inscriptions of code in the soot-stained brick facade.

Look at your superimposed reflection in the window across from your seat and envision subatomic particles acquiring sentience in the vacuum of an Accelerator. All wondering how it is they got there, who it is they presume to be.

Always wondering. Spiraling...really! Always spiraling at breakneck speeds through the vacuum—eternally in doubt. You are suddenly reminded of the words of that great Algorithmist painter, Carlotta Wakefield, 'Mediocre painters portray that which they understand. Fabulous painters: that which they Surmise...'

You wonder if that, too, applies to our constructions of reality, ersatz or otherwise.

(From the short story "Leapfrog")”
Ashim Shanker, trenches parallax leapfrog




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