For several years she worked as an editor at The American Scholar before leaving the position to write full-time.[4]
Beasley is the author of the poetry collections Theories of Falling (New Issues, 2008) and I Was the Jukebox, (W.W. Norton, 2010), as well as the memoir Don't Kill the Birthday Girl: Tales from an Allergic Life (Crown, 2011), which is also a cultural history of food allergies.[5] Her poetry has been anthologized in The Best American Poetry 2010, Poetry Daily, Verse Daily, and Best New Poets 2005, as well as such journals as Poetry, The Believer, AGNI online, Blackbird, Barrelhouse, Copper Nickel, Gulf Coast, and Black Warrior Review. She was a regular contributor to the "XX Files" column for the Washington Post Magazine[6][7] and more recently her prose has appeared in the Wall Street Journal[8] and Psychology Today.
A selection of her poems appeared in the handmade, collective minimag Four by Two,[9] helmed by klipschutz (pen name of Kurt Lipschutz) and Jeremy Gaulke, published between 2014 and 2017, The complete 12-issue run of the minimag was purchased by UC Berkeley’s Bancroft Library, for inclusion in its Special Collections[10].
Die Abtastnadel in der Rille eines traurigen Lieds. Selected poems. Bilingual edition (German, English). Berlin: Hochroth Press, 2011. pp. 28. ISBN978-3-942161-13-8