The Woman Who Owned the Shadows

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Aunt Lute Books
Paula Gunn Allen
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The Woman Who Owned the Shadows starts where the rest of the world leaves Indians off: at the brink of death. Ephanie Atencio is in the midst of a breakdown from which she can barely move. She has been left by her husband and is unable to take care of her children. To heal, Ephanie must seek, however gropingly, her own future. She leaves New Mexico for San Francisco, where she begins again the process of remembering, of trying to sort out the parts of her, ultimately finding a way to herself, relying no longer on men, but on her primary connections to the spirit women of her people and to the women of her own world.


— The New York Times Book Review

 Ephanie’s search for her own definition, for her strength, for her self, is intricate and stark as the spirit shawl she weaves, a bridge between her and Spider Woman, between the old power and new pain of her people. In her history lies the seed of promise, and her journeys weave hauntingly through many realities. — Audre Lorde

 The Woman Who Owned the Shadows is a book full of power…the kind of power that wells up from the earth like a hot spring, the power to change, to heal, to cleanse… — Joseph Bruchac

 The Woman Who Owned the Shadows is one of the first novels by and about contemporary Indian women…It is a new form, one of many evolving in mixed-blood women’s literature, circular, cyclical, bringing all time and life into the present. — Linda Hogan

 The Woman Who Owned the Shadows is a book that, if you come with an honest heart, will change the way you think and feel. It will help us—all of us—to grow up…to become intelligent, caring, sensitive beings who use both sides of their brains for their perceptions. Don’t miss out on it. — Judy Grahn

 Paula Gunn Allen has given us…a sensitive, sophisticated, forceful portrait of a contemporary American Indian woman, a valuable addition to the increasingly impressive list of novels by American Indians. — American Indian Culture and Research Journal

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Contributor Bio

The daughter of a Laguna Pueblo, Sioux and Scottish mother, and a Lebanese-American father, Paula Gunn Allen was raised in a small New Mexican village. A major Native American poet, writer, lecturer, and scholar, Allen has won many awards, including the American Book Award and the Susan Koppleman Award. She is the author of seven volumes of poetry, a novel, a collection of essays, two anthologies, and the well-received Spider Woman’s Granddaughters: Native American Women’s Traditional and Short Stories. Her book Pochahantas: Medicine Woman, Spy, Entrepreneur, Diplomat was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 2004. Allen was the third recipient since 1964 to receive the MLA’s Hubbell Medal for Lifetime Achievement in American Literature.

 Allen received her MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Oregon and a PhD in American Studies from the University of New Mexico. Throughout her lifetime, she taught Literature, Creative Writing, and Native American Studies at various learning institutions, including the Ft. Lewis College in Colorado, University of New Mexico, San Diego State University, San Francisco State University, University of California Los Angeles, and University of California Berkeley. Paula passed away on May 29, 2008. Her voice has contributed to various fields such as Native American Studies, Women and Gender Studies, and Anthropology.

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