Maureen Gibbon


Maureen Gibbon is an American novelist and writer. She also writes short fiction, nonfiction and reviews books. Her works have been published in several print and online publications. Gibbon has three novels, Paris Red, Swimming Sweet Arrow and Thief.

Achievements

Gibbon's most recent novel, Paris Red, was featured on NPR's Weekend Edition Saturday with Scott Simon. It was also translated into French under the title Rouge Paris and published in 2014. The American release was in 2015 under the publisher W.W. Norton. Gibbon also wrote the prose collection Magdalena. She's been published in The New York Times, Huffington Post, Playboy and other publications. Gibbon received a Bush Foundation Artist fellowship in 2001, and a Loft McKnight Artists fellowship in 1992 and 1999. She became an artist in residence of the Mill Foundation at the Santa Fe Arts Institute in 2006.

Education

Gibbon studied at Barnard College in New York and the Iowa Writers' Workshop.

Teaching

Gibbon has taught at Bemidji State University since 2006 in the English department. Gibbon was promoted to professor on Sept. 1, 2015.
Gibbon's courses typically are writing workshops for Bemidji State University's BFA program. Gibbon often offers electives in literature ranging from to travel narratives to .

Publishing course

In 2012, Gibbon created and taught Literary Publishing I and II, which focused on creating and running the lit magazine and Paper Plains. Prior to CRE8, Gibbon was the faculty advisor for the editorial board of an anthology "New Voices" and an all women's anthology called "Dust and Fire".

Personal life

Gibbon currently lives in Minnesota.

Books and prose collections

Gibbon's 2010 novel Thief centers on the penpal relationship between Suzanne – who was raped in high school – and Alpha – a convicted rapist. As Suzanne and Alpha's relationship builds, Suzanne finds herself working through her sexual assault.

Other writing