Smiling person with light brown hair styled with an undercut and long bangs, wearing a blue and white polka dot shirt and long gold earrings, posed against a light gray background at the DC Free Expression Advocacy Institute.

Caits Meissner

Director, Prison and Justice Writing

Caits Meissner is director of Prison and Justice Writing at PEN America. Before joining PEN America, Meissner was an integral team member in developing community arts and education programs for organizations such as Tribeca Film Institute, The Bronx Academy of Letters, Urban Arts Partnership, The Facing History School, and The Lower Eastside Girls Club. She has taught, consulted, and co-created extensively for over 15 years across a wide spectrum of communities with a focus on prisons, public schools, and college classrooms at The New School University and The City College of New York. From 2012–2014, Meissner served over 500 women worldwide in an original intensive online writing course that matured into live programming, including a reading series, courses for incarcerated youth and adult women, and state-sponsored cultural exchange in Malaysia. In 2017, Meissner reenvisioned the concept of book tour for her illustrated poetry collection Let It Die Hungry (The Operating System, 2016), pairing public speaking engagements with opportunities to work with incarcerated writers across the United States. Meissner holds an MFA in Creative Writing from the City College of New York, where she was awarded The Jerome Lowell DeJur Prize in Creative Writing, an Educational Enrichment Award, and The Teacher-Writer Award. She is deeply invested in the transformative, restorative, and change-making capacities of imagination and creativity.


Articles by Caits Meissner

The image is split in two: on the left, “When I Reach for Your Pulse” by Rishii Vyas is written in a circle around abstract black and blue art; on the right, a bearded person in a pale shirt sits outdoors on a bench.
Writing as Craft
Tuesday April 4

The PEN Ten: An Interview with Rushi Vyas

I’d rather tend toward over-sharing than under-sharing. I’d rather tend toward more understanding than less.

Empty wooden bookshelves and display stands are arranged in a room with blue carpet and white walls. Some boxes and cardboard are placed on top of the shelves.
Writing as Craft
Thursday October 20

The PEN Ten: An Interview with Cheryl Boyce-Taylor

It has always been my intention to give my readers truth and offer them permission to be truthful without judgment in their own lives and work.

A person with short hair, wearing a colorful sweater, sits in a room with blue walls and bookshelves. Next to them is the cover of a book titled DADDY BOY by Emerson Whitney, featuring a black-and-white tornado photo.
Writing as Craft
Thursday June 2

The PEN Ten: An Interview with Ada Limón

“I want to be as free as anyone to write what they want to write and to be human in all those beautiful, necessary, and urgent ways.”

More Articles by Caits Meissner

A promotional graphic for Quilted Steel: A Choreopoem by Mahogany L. Browne featuring the book cover, a portrait of the author in colorful attire, and the Pen America logo on a yellow background with butterfly motifs.
Prison and Justice Writing
Wednesday May 25

Introducing Mahogany L. Browne’s “Quilted Steel: A Choreopoem”

A smiling woman wearing a black DRAMA CLUB shirt stands in front of a matching backdrop, symbolizing the resilience of incarceration families. The image features the Pen America logo and a red Works of Justice overlay in the corner.
Prison and Justice Writing
Monday November 16

Works of Justice Podcast: Actor, Mentor, and Mother Dunasha Payne on Parenting Through the Walls and the Power of Theater

A woman with curly, short brown hair and hoop earrings smiles outdoors, wearing a black sweater with gold studs. Green foliage and rocks are in the background.
Prison and Justice Writing
Tuesday June 23

Art in the Age of Mass Incarceration: A Dialogue with Nicole R. Fleetwood

Split image: On the left, a man with a beard and head covering stands indoors; on the right, a woman with blond hair in a black blazer stands on a balcony outdoors. Text below reads, Temperature Check Vol 9.
Prison and Justice Writing
Tuesday May 12

Temperature Check, Vol. Five: The Women’s Issue feat. Elizabeth Hawes and Keri Blakinger

Split image: On the left, a young boy with glasses and a blue jacket smiles outside. On the right, an older man in a suit and glasses looks serious. Text below reads, Temperature Check Vol 4.
Prison and Justice Writing
Wednesday April 29

Temperature Check, Vol. Four feat. Vincent Schiraldi and Edward Ji

Split-image: Left side shows a cartoon of a blue-haired man with The Punk Rock Spock Prison Pandemic Guide text above; right side features a stylish man posing by a green railing. Text below reads: Temperature Check Vol 3.
Prison and Justice Writing
Wednesday April 15

Temperature Check, Vol. Three Feat. Jeremy Wilson and Lawrence Bartley

Split image: left side shows a digital illustration of a man with short hair and a beard; right side shows a smiling woman in a red top with arms crossed. Text below reads, Temperature Check Vol 2.
Prison and Justice Writing
Wednesday April 8

Temperature Check, Vol. Two Feat. Justin Rovillos Monson & Josie Duffy Rice

A thermometer lies on a white background with bold text reading Temperature Check, COVID-19, and Behind Bars, suggesting a focus on the pandemics impact in prisons. Ruler marks frame the top and bottom edges.
Prison and Justice Writing
Wednesday April 1

Works of Justice: Temperature Check, COVID-19 Behind Bars, Vol. One

A woman with long dark hair and glasses, wearing a white shirt, stands in front of green bamboo leaves, looking directly at the camera with a neutral expression.
Writing as Craft
Friday March 20

The PEN Ten: An Interview with Diana Marie Delgado

Logos for PEN Americas Prison Writing Program and NaNoWriMo are side by side. Below, text reads: 46 support comments | Week 3 | 4 Novels completed.
Prison and Justice Writing
Tuesday December 3

Works of Justice: How to Write a Novel in a Month (While in Prison), Week 3

Two logos side by side: Pen America Prison Writing Program with hands gripping pencils as prison bars, and NaNoWriMo with a Viking helmet, coffee, pens, paper, plus 15 participants, Week 2, and 4 write-ins below.
Prison and Justice Writing
Friday November 15

Works of Justice: How to Write a Novel in a Month (While in Prison), Week 2

Logos for PEN America Prison Writing Program (hands gripping prison bars made of pencils) and NaNoWriMo 2021 (blue shield with Viking helmet, coffee mug, laptop, pens, and stack of paper), separated by a plus sign.
Prison and Justice Writing
Friday November 1

Works of Justice: How to Write a Novel in a Month (While in Prison)

A collage of eight diverse people, each facing the camera and smiling or looking neutral, photographed in different settings and lighting.
Writing as Craft
Thursday October 31

The PEN Ten: An Interview with the 2019 Writing for Justice Fellows

A man with a shaved head and a beard smiles in front of a wall covered in ivy or vines.
Writing as Craft
Thursday September 19

The PEN Ten: Jevon Jackson on Uncompromising Truth and What Makes for Good Narrative

Text reading EXPOSURE on writing in prison in bold, expressive black font on a mottled gray background.
Prison and Justice Writing
Wednesday July 10

Works of Justice: On Writing in Prison

A man with short dark hair and fair skin, wearing a white shirt, sits in front of a metal mesh background and smiles slightly at the camera.
Prison and Justice Writing
Friday April 19

Works of Justice: An Interview with Writing for Justice Fellow Thomas Bartlett Whitaker

A young man with short dark hair and a beard is wearing a blue collared shirt and standing in front of a colorful, abstract background with red and orange shapes.
Prison and Justice Writing
Wednesday April 17

Works of Justice: An Interview with Writing for Justice Fellow Justin Rovillos Monson