Explore the rare book room’s Native American literature collection

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Visit the John Wilson Special Collections at Central Library and be awestruck by items from the Native American literature collection. 

The library added the Native American literature collection in 2004, with curation support from Elizabeth Woody, a member of the Confederate Tribes of Warm Springs and Poet Laureate of Oregon in 2017. 

Here are five highlights from the Native American Collection:

1. Rain by Leslie Marmon Silko and her photographer father, Lee Marmon, is an artist book. Marmon Silko and Marmon are Laguna Pueblo. Developed in 1996, the book comes with a photograph signed by Lee Marmon. The book is made with handmade paper from the Dieu Donné paper mill and has a deckle edge. The binding is hand stitched in a vertical pattern that references a downpour. The book offers meditations and is not a linear story. This copy is number 80 out of 130 ever made. 

2. Manuscripts by Elizabeth Woody and Janice Gould (Koyangk'auwi Maidu) can offer scholars opportunity to learn more about the thought process of these writers; these manuscripts provide insight as to what their pieces looked like before they were finalized. 

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A manilla folder open, on the right there is a stack of papers, on the left there is a book with the back cover showing the author's photograph.

3. In the Presence of the Sun: Sixteen Plains Indian Shield Drawings by N. Scott Momaday is a folio of loose pages and images. Upon opening the folder, you’ll find a sheet with letterpress printed images that are hand colored, accompanied by a short story on the following page. Only 48 complete suites of drawings have been created. 

4. Eagle poem by Joy Harjo (Muscogee Nation, Oce Vpofv) is available in a printed single sheet of paper, also known as a broadside. Only 150 copies were printed for the Watershed Environmental Poetry Festival in Berkeley, California on September 29, 2012. Harjo was selected as the 23rd United States Poet Laureate and was the first Native American to serve in the role.

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Joy Harjo’s Eagle Poem on paper on a table.

5. Luminaries of the humble by Elizabeth Woody is a book of poems published in 1994. Although this book can be found in the library’s collection for you to check out, the copy in the special collections room is signed by the author. Woody is Navajo, Warm Springs, Wasco, Yakama and was Oregon’s first Native American Poet Laureate.

Visit the John Wilson Special Collections room to see these and more items for yourself. You can also check out examples of books by Indigenous authors in the library’s circulating collection.

The John Wilson Special Collections is supported by gifts to The Library Foundation, a local nonprofit dedicated to our library's leadership, innovation and reach through private support.

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