Kathleen Alcalá is the author of six books. Her work has received the Western States Book Award, the Governor’s Writers Award, and a Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Book Award. A Jack Straw Writing Fellow in 2001 and 2012, she received her second Artist Trust Fellowship in 2008, and was recognized by Con Tinta at the Associated Writing Programs Conference in 2014. She has been designated an Island Treasure in the Arts on Bainbridge Island.
Kathleen’s most recent book is The Deepest Roots: Finding Food and Community on a Pacific Northwest Island, by the University of Washington Press. Through numerous interviews, she explores our relationship with food and the land.
Kathleen has a B.A. in Linguistics from Stanford University, an M.A. in Creative Writing from the University of Washington, and an MFA from the University of New Orleans. Kathleen has a great affinity for the story-telling techniques of magic realism and science fiction, and has been both a student and instructor in the Clarion West Science Fiction Workshop. A descendant of the Ópata of Sonora, she lives and works on Suquamish territory, for which she is thankful.
Kathleen taught at the Northwest Institute of Literary Arts on Whidbey Island from 2008 to 2016. Her novel, Treasures in Heaven, about the feminist movement in 19th Century Mexico, is republished by Raven Chronicles Press in the Spring of 2025. Her science fiction novel, Why Stars Burn, will be published by Rosarium Publishing in the fall of 2025.
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