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Gordana Karakasevska
Member since April 14, 2026
Member for 1 month, 22 days
The Game of Shadows
There is another me, her name is the same as mine, Ana,
only in the morning when she wakes her eyes are darker
like my mother’s,
and she speaks to my husband while lying
on my pillow with that cheerful, playful voice of hers.
She kisses my daughter on the forehead, wishing her
good morning, and successfully hides from me
everything that escapes and falls away into the past.
There is, I tell you, another me,
she has the same last name as mine — Karakash —
she reads my books, and imagine!
When we are alone she reproaches me
with a voice that is entirely mine
and manages to make me cry. Every time.
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I painted, I lived in Turin, but she brought me back.
“You are young, life is ahead of you,” she said.
I close myself off, yet she finds me at night to tell me
how much I have not done.
“You agreed to everything in this life,” she says.
“You accepted everything!”
“I would not!” — she screams in my face.
“I would rather die!” — she whispers in my ear.
Everyone I know loves her more, Ana Karakash.
She is kind to shopkeepers,
works in a library, and gives smiles to everyone.
She hugs my husband and my daughter,
who do not actually exist,
we invented them,
and she tells me: Jump!
Gordana Karakasevska’s timeline
- April 2026
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14 Tue
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14 TueFirst publication
House of Paper
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14 Tue
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14 TueJoined Neopoet
Membership begins
First poem published 1 days later.
About Me
BIOGRAPHY
Gordana Karakashevska (born 1973) is a poet, essayist, writer, artist, and photographer. She spent several years living and working in Turin, Italy, an experience that left a deep mark on her as a creative person and artist. She is engaged in various forms of art and pursues photography in her free time. She has been writing since she was thirteen, actively participating in regional competitions in both art and literary works. For her, writing is a way of life, and art is a universal language.
She writes poetry and short stories primarily in Macedonian, but also in Italian, Serbian, and English. Her poems have been translated into multiple languages and published in domestic and international online communities, magazines, and anthologies.
Books
• Poetry: A Broken Poet and Other Poems (2021), House of Paper (2022), The Way of the Water (2024)
• Prose: Signor Giordano and Reflections on Doubts, Dilemmas, and Questions and Some Other Small Grains (stories, 2021), Undressing in the Year of the Goat (novel, 2021), Everything In This World (novel, 2025)
Poetry Style
Gordana Karakashevska’s poetry is characterized by an intimate, contemplative tone and attention to the subtleties of human experience. Her verses often explore memory, emotion, and fleeting moments of everyday life, drawing readers into a world where personal reflections intertwine with broader observations of reality. Her style blends lyrical precision with a meditative, sometimes fragmented structure, creating a rhythm that feels both natural and immersive. She frequently employs vivid imagery, metaphor, and understated symbolism, allowing ordinary objects or moments to acquire profound emotional weight.
Her poetry is also marked by a sensitivity to language and sound, with careful attention to cadence, line breaks, and musicality. This combination gives her work a timeless, reflective quality, inviting readers to linger over each image and sentiment. In essence, her poetry is both personal and universal, capturing the quiet, often unnoticed textures of life with depth and elegance.
Prose Style
Karakashevska’s prose demonstrates psychological depth, realism, and meticulous attention to everyday life. Her narratives often unfold in small, seemingly ordinary settings, such as a local hair salon or a neighborhood playground, yet reveal complex human dynamics, unspoken tensions, and the subtleties of social interaction.
A hallmark of her style is polyphonic storytelling, where characters speak over and alongside one another, creating layered, immersive dialogue that mirrors real conversations. This technique allows her to capture multiple perspectives simultaneously, providing both immediacy and depth. The dialogue feels spontaneous and authentic, yet is carefully structured to maintain clarity and narrative tension, demonstrating her craftsmanship.
Her prose is rich in detail and observation. Ordinary objects, routines, and gestures acquire significance, establishing a sense of place and reflecting the inner states of her characters. She often juxtaposes the banal and the dramatic, revealing the extraordinary in the everyday and highlighting contrasts between personal perception and communal reality.
Another distinctive feature is subtle social critique. Through small-town interactions and the quiet anxieties of her characters, she exposes societal norms, fears, and moral ambiguities, emphasizing how individuals navigate the limits of social expectation and collective memory. Her narrative voice combines clarity with emotional resonance, blending realism with reflective moments that linger in the reader’s mind.
In summary, Gordana Karakashevska’s prose is intimate, layered, and observant, merging realism with psychological insight. Her work captures the texture of small-town life, the intricacies of human relationships, and the quiet drama of everyday existence, making her stories both compelling and memorable.
Awards and Recognitions
• Third Prize for the short story Debutante, awarded on the occasion of World Book Day 2022 by the House of Culture “Ilinden,” Demir Hisar.
• Commendation Award for the short story For Health and Joy at the third literary competition Telling a Photo 2022, organized by the Fund of the Holocaust of the Jews of Macedonia.
• Winner of the Poetry Contest at the third edition of the Poetry Race 2023 with the poem My Race.
• Second Prize for the short story Cold Shivers in 2024, awarded by the House of Culture “Ilinden,” Demir Hisar, on the occasion of World Book Day 2024.
• Second Prize for the poetry selection IVY at the first competition for best unpublished literary work, organized by the Department of Creative Writing at the American University College Skopje in cooperation with the publishing house Ars Lamina (September 2024).
Some of her poetry has been translated into English, Italian, Croatian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Albanian, Spanish, and Indian languages, and published in print and online anthologies.
Recent Work
Contest Wins
This member has not yet won any contests.