Paulette Jiles


Paulette Kay Jiles was an American poet, memoirist and novelist.

Background

Paulette Kay Jiles was born in 1943 in Salem, Missouri. She attended college at the University of Missouri–Kansas City, graduating in 1968 with a major in Romance Languages. Jiles moved to Toronto, Canada in 1969, where she worked for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and, subsequently, helped set up native-language FM radio stations with indigenous peoples in the far north of Ontario and Quebec for the next 10 years. In the process, she learned the Ojibwe language
spoken by the Anishinaabeg peoples in Ontario and elsewhere.
After marrying Jim Johnson, she moved with him to San Antonio in 1991. After several years of travel, including living in Mexico, the couple resettled in San Antonio in 1995, buying a house in the historical district. After her divorce in 2003, Jiles lived on a 36-acre ranch near Utopia, Texas, about 80 miles west of San Antonio.
In June 2025, Jiles announced that she had been diagnosed with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. She died at a San Antonio hospital on July 8, 2025, at the age of 82.

Writing career

Her 2016 novel News of the World was a finalist for the National Book Award for Fiction.

Selected bibliography

  • Waterloo Express
  • Celestial Navigation
  • The Golden Hawks
  • Sitting in the Club Car Drinking Rum and Karma Kola
  • The Late Great Human Road Show
  • The Jesse James Poems
  • Blackwater
  • Song to the Rising Sun
  • Cousins
  • Flying Lesson: Selected Poems
  • North Spirit: Sojourns Among the Cree and Ojibway Nations and Their Star Maps
  • Enemy Women
  • Stormy Weather
  • The Color of Lightning
  • Lighthouse Island
  • News of the World
  • Simon the Fiddler
  • ''Chenneville: A Novel of Murder, Loss, and Vengeance''