La Llorona's ghostly figure has haunted the pages of Chicanx literature for years as the monstrous woman. While her story shifts forms depending on the cultural context, the essentials remain: she was a woman, wronged by the father of her children, who now wanders the rivers at night wailing for the two children she drowned in anger, grief, or desperation. She has often been considered a monstrous figure whose function has been to regulate female identity. However, authors like Gloria Anzaldúa and Sandra Cisneros have sought to reclaim this ghostly visage from the grasp of patriarchal structures that condemn la Llorona's actions. Anzaldúa's poem "My Black Angelos" and Sandra Cisneros' short story "Woman Hollering Creek" revise la Llorona to acknowledge the female agency she represents. While critics have focused on feminine agency in these works, the function of the monstrous has been overlooked. The monstrous usually refers to something feared or uncanny with women and people of color's bodies representing cultural fears, but in these cases the monstrous is reimagined as a tool for agency. Through the lens of monster theory, and drawing on the theories of Jeffrey Cohen, Cristina Santos, and Luce Irigaray, this paper argues that Anzaldua's and Cisneros' representations of la Llorona develop feminine agency and community just as other critics have mentioned, but they also complicate monster theory by resituating the subjectivity to account for the postive monster of la Llorona. Through this, monster theory's dependence on a self/other dichotomy falls away and, with it, la Llorona's position as only a monster to be feared. Instead, these representations of la Llorona invite Chicanx women into the community of the monstrous, where Cisneros and Anzaldúa transform it from an androcentric space of "othering" and oppression to one of belonging and power.