Alyson R. Quinn

Alyson R. Quinn is the editorial director at Prison Fellowship. She is a graduate of Georgetown University and holds an M.A. in Nonfiction Writing from Johns Hopkins University. Her work has appeared in the Washington Post, WORLD Magazine, and other print and online publications. She is based in the Carolinas.

STORIES & ARTICLES WRITTEN BY ALYSON R. QUINN

Transitional Housing
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Second Chance Month
  • Uncategorized
Transitional Housing for Ex-Prisoners—Get Advice From an Expert

We all depend on the four walls and a roof that we call home. Safe housing—like food, water, and clothing—is one of the simple needs all people have in common. But when it comes to ex-prisoners' need for housing, finding solutions is anything but simple.

By Alyson R. Quinn
February 16, 2011
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
Afraid to Lead? Just Follow Jesus

 

Ten years ago, touched by the need for Spanish-speaking volunteers in Arizona prisons, Maria Marin responded to a call from Prison Fellowship. But she still had some reservations. She remembers telling the Lord, “I will go willingly into the women’s prison, but please don’t send me to the men’s prison!”

By Alyson R. Quinn
February 12, 2011
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
Can’t Do It on My Own: When Women Go to Prison

Since 1985 the population of female prisoners has risen at nearly double the rate of males. Because women prisoners have historically been few, however, corrections policy has often not taken gender-specific needs into account. But over time, it has become increasingly obvious that female prisoners have different needs than men.

By Alyson R. Quinn
January 12, 2011
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Uncategorized
“Can’t Do It on My Own”: Addressing Special Needs of Female Prisoners

Since 1985 the population of female prisoners has risen at nearly double the rate of males. Because women prisoners have historically been few, however, corrections policy has often not taken gender-specific needs into account. But over time, it has become increasingly obvious that female prisoners have different needs than men.

By Alyson R. Quinn
January 12, 2011
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Uncategorized
What’s It Like to Record an Album in Prison? Inside Out Asks Sara Groves

When award-winning singer-songwriter Sara Groves set out to produce a new Christmas album, she wanted to record songs that would inspire reflection on the true meaning of Christmas—that Christ left glory to take up suffering not His own. Groves wound up performing a Christmas concert for prisoners and recording the session live—from behind prison walls.

By Alyson R. Quinn
December 14, 2010
father and son play football together.
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Angel Tree
  • Families of Prisoners
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Second Chance Month
  • Uncategorized
Lockdown Freedom

Chris Cleveland smoked his first joint at age 12. He remembers because that year his father and mother finally divorced.

By Alyson R. Quinn
October 29, 2010
New Mexico
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
Building a Lasting Legacy with Missouri Prisoners

Tom Maxwell, a long-time Prison Fellowship volunteer, points to the partially constructed gazebo on the grounds of the community hospital in Boonville, Missouri, as work-release prisoners from the nearby Boonville Correctional Center move nimbly across the gazebo’s roof, adding tar paper and shingles.

By Alyson R. Quinn
October 28, 2010
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
Enhancing Communicaton with Prisoners

 

No snitching. Keep to yourself. Don’t trust people. Mind your own business. These are just some of a long list of understood rules in prison culture, according to Sam Dye, national program director for the InnerChange Freedom Initiative®(IFI), a values-based reentry program developed by and affiliated with Prison Fellowship.

By Alyson R. Quinn
October 13, 2010
Frontlines - October 2010
  • Advocacy & Reentry
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Second Chance Month
  • Uncategorized
Making Himself Heard

With one terrible choice, Reggie Holmes' world suddenly seemed to have ended.  But with the help of Prison Fellowship's® year-long reentry program at James River Correctional Center, Reggie was given the opportunity to make a fresh start.

Peggy Holmes, a disabled single mother, forbade her only child, Reggie, to step off the front porch.

By Alyson R. Quinn
October 11, 2010
Prisoners Train Helping Hounds for Veterans
  • Feature Stories
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Uncategorized
Prisoners Train Helping Hounds for Veterans

His eyes concealed behind dark sunglasses, Chris Goehner walks into a restaurant in Washington, D.C., shadowed by his service dog, Pelé. When Chris sits, the large, sunny-coated retriever curls up on top of his feet. The restaurant employees notice Pelé and assume that Chris cannot see—until they spy him typing text messages on his cell phone.

By Alyson R. Quinn
October 11, 2010
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder | Puppies Behind Bars | Service Dogs | Veterans
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
Hardwired to Connect: Where Nature Meets Nurture

Although people with loving, Christian parents do make choices that lead to prison, unhealthy home environments are more closely linked to criminal behavior. But why do abuse and neglect predispose children toward deviancy as adults? A major research paper sheds light on how human beings are biologically designed to seek nurturing relationships and spiritual purpose, and how the absence of these beneficial influences adversely affects brain development.

By Alyson R. Quinn
September 18, 2010
  • Angel Tree
  • Uncategorized
Giving it All Away

 

When fresh from prison, Sarah Montoya-Lewis attended church with her school-age daughter on the day of an Angel Tree backpack giveaway. She asked for a backpack for her daughter, and though none remained, Sarah left with much more—an instant friend in Angel Tree coordinator Barb Steward.

By Alyson R. Quinn
September 18, 2010
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
Hooked: Prison Ministry Makes Episcopal Men’s Group into Fishers of Men

When asked to describe his volunteer work at a local pre-release center, Beaver Hardy, 71,  issues his usual warning: “If you come, you’re going to get hooked, and you’re going to stay.”

Beaver Hardy, 71, is savoring his share of fried flounder.

By Alyson R. Quinn
August 19, 2010
  • Inside Journal
  • Prison & Prisoners
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
Inside Journal Returns

Prison Fellowship has relaunched Inside Journal, a newspaper that reaches thousands of incarcerated men and women with the hope of the Gospel. With a starting circulation of 50,000 copies, Inside Journal has a new look after a hiatus in its publication, but it retains the elements that made it a widely read and admired resource in our nation’s prisons for nearly two decades.

By Alyson R. Quinn
August 19, 2010
  • Prison Fellowship News & Updates
  • Uncategorized
The Road Home

Robert* was going home—if he could figure out how. An ex-prisoner who encountered Christ behind bars, he felt led upon release to start somewhere new. He sold his possessions, scrounged up $500, and set off in a donated van with no fixed destination.

By Alyson R. Quinn
August 13, 2010
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