Crying Wind

Last updated

Linda Stafford
Pen nameCrying Wind
OccupationWriter
NationalityAmerican
SubjectAmerican Indians

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Linda Davison Stafford, also known as Crying Wind, April Knight, and Gwendlelynn Lovequist [1] is the author of several novels including Crying Wind and My Searching Heart which describe the experiences of a young Native American girl named "Crying Wind", and tell a story of Christian conversion. [2] Under the pseudonym Gwendlelynn Lovequist, she has written many love stories and romances, for publications such as Writer's Digest . [1]

Contents

Education and businesses

Stafford attended the University of Colorado (1961), the University of Texas (1966), the University of New Mexico (1967), and the University of Alaska (1969). [1] She has run art galleries in Santa Fe, Anchorage, and Oklahoma City. [1]

Publication and exposure

Stafford was described as a Kickapoo author and a convert to Christianity when her book Crying Wind was published in 1977. [3] Soon, she was touring, promoting her book and giving her conversion testimony in churches and at conferences across the United States, dressed in Indian garb. [3]

Later editions of her books, which were published by Moody Press, included a disclaimer that said names, dates, and places had been changed. [2] In 1979, Moody Press took the books out of print due to concerns that the books were not presented as fiction. [2] Stafford said the problem arose due to "an unfortunate misunderstanding" between herself and Moody Press, connected to changes in staff and policies at Moody. [2] She maintained that Crying Wind "is still based on my life", and that her mother was indeed raised on a Kickapoo reservation. [2] Her next publisher, Harvest House, stated that it is honest to call Crying Wind a "biographical novel." [2]

Her book Crying Wind sold over 80,000 copies, and has been translated into over a dozen foreign languages. [2] [1] Indian Life has published two of her other books, When the Stars Danced and Thunder in Our Hearts Lightning in Our Veins under their imprint, Sequoyah Editions. [4] [5]

List of her books

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Kievit, Joyce Ann. "Crying Wind" in Native American Women: A Biographical Dictionary , p. 79 (Bataille and Lisa, eds., Routledge, 2001).
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "'Crying Wind' is Back, but Not as a Biography This Time". Christianity Today , v. 25, p. 44 (January 23, 1981).
  3. 1 2 Veach, Tucker. "A Remarkable Life" The Times-News , p. 1 (April 20, 1978).
  4. Uttley, Jim. "Native American World Indian Life Books Publishes Three New Titles" Archived 2011-09-29 at the Wayback Machine , ASSIST News Service (November 23, 2010).
  5. Uttley, Jim. "NATIVE AMERICAN WORLD: Intertribal Christian Communications celebrates 30th anniversary" Archived 2014-04-16 at the Wayback Machine , ASSIST News Service (October 26, 2009).