Winner

Award History
| Award | Year | Status | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anisfield-Wolf Book Award – Nonfiction | 1993 | Winner |
About the Author
Marija Alseikaite GimbutasLithuanian
Marija Birutė Alseikaitė-Gimbutienė (1921–1994) was a Lithuanian archaeologist and anthropologist renowned for her Kurgan hypothesis, which posits the Pontic Steppe as the Proto-Indo-European homeland, and her theories on the Neolithic "Old Europe" cultures as peaceful, egalitarian societies centered on goddess worship, detailed in her Goddess trilogy including The Goddesses and Gods of Old Europe (1974), The Language of the Goddess (1989), and The Civilization of the Goddess (1991). Born in Vilnius, she fled WWII occupations to the US, taught at UCLA, directed key excavations, and pioneered archaeomythology, though her matriarchal views remain controversial [Anisfield-Wolf].
Similar Award-Winning Books
- Winner
Far From the Tree: Parents, Children, and the Search for Identity
Andrew SolomonAnisfield-Wolf Book Award – Nonfiction - Winner
The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family
Annette Gordon-ReedAnisfield-Wolf Book Award – Nonfiction - Winner
- Winner
The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration
Isabel WilkersonAnisfield-Wolf Book Award – Nonfiction - Winner





