Erdrich has published several volumes of poetry:
Fishing for Myth (1997); ''The Mother's Tongue
(2005); National Monuments
(2008), which won the Minnesota Book Award; Cell Traffic
(2012); and Curator of Ephemera at the New Museum for Archaic Media'' (2017), which won the Minnesota Book Award in 2018. She has also written short stories and nonfiction. In 2016, Erdrich's "every-blest-thing-seeing-eye" was named the Winter Book by the Minnesota Center for Book Arts. More recently, Erdrich has garnered attention and won awards from Co-Kisser Poetry Festival and Southwestern Association for Indian Artists for her video-poems or poem films—short, collaborative pieces treating contemporary indigenous themes including the
Idle No More movement. One of the central collaborators in these video-poems is painter and digital media artist Jonathan Thunder. Some of her video-poem works include: [http://movingpoems.com/poet/heid-e-erdrich/ • Od'e Miikan-Heart Line (Moose version) • It Was Cloudy • Undead Faerie Goes Great with India Pale Ale • Lexiconography 1 • Pre-Occupied • Indigenous Elvis Works the Medicine Line In addition to her own writing, Erdrich also promotes the work of other Native American authors. She is a guest editor at the
Yellow Medicine Review, a journal devoted to indigenous literature and art; and she co-edited a volume of writing by Native American women with Navajo poet
Laura Tohe. Her second anthology,
New Poets of Native Nations, featuring Native poets who have published first books since the year 2000, was published by
Graywolf Press in 2018. Scholar Scott Andrews reviewed the book stating that "These new poets of Native nations carry their voices into an indigenous future that settler colonialism tried to foreclose and that mainstream publishing too seldom recognizes," and noting that it was the first "substantial anthology of US Native poetry" since 1988. With her sister Louise, she founded The Birchbark House fund at the Minneapolis Foundation, with the intent of supporting Native writing and Native language revitalization. Erdrich also directs Wiigwaas Press, which publishes books in
Ojibwe (Anishinaabe), as well as films and other media. On December 19, 2023, the City of Minneapolis announced that Erdrich was appointed as the city's first poet laureate. == Curatorial practice ==