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Frederick Manfred (1912–1994)

Author of Lord Grizzly

35+ Works 512 Members 10 Reviews

About the Author

Born in Iowa, Manfred has lived much of his life in southern Minnesota. Most of his novels are set in southern Minnesota and the Dakotas, and his Native American characters are usually Sioux. A fine storyteller, Manfred does extensive historical research, which gives his books a sense of show more authenticity. He is also interested in psychology and human sexuality, and many of his books have Freudian or Jungian overtones. Manfred often focuses on the importance of the land in shaping his characters: frequently in his books, a man must test himself against the wilderness in order to discover his true nature. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Disambiguation Notice:

Feike Feikema is the name under which Frederick Manfred wrote before he changed his name legally to Frederick Feikema Manfred.

Series

Works by Frederick Manfred

Lord Grizzly (1954) 143 copies
Conquering Horse (1959) 65 copies
Scarlet Plume (1964) 46 copies
Riders of Judgement (1973) 32 copies
The Manly Hearted Woman (1975) 29 copies
The Golden Bowl (1944) 29 copies
King of Spades (1973) 20 copies
Johnson County War [2002 TV movie] (2002) — Writer — 14 copies
Green Earth (1977) 13 copies
The Chokecherry Tree (1948) 11 copies
Sons of Adam (1980) 9 copies
The Wind Blows Free (1979) 9 copies
This Is the Year (1979) 9 copies

Associated Works

The WPA Guide to Minnesota (1938) — Introduction, some editions — 70 copies
Growing Up in Iowa: Reminiscences of 14 Iowa Authors (1978) — Contributor — 30 copies
Inheriting the Land: Contemporary Voices from the Midwest (1993) — Contributor — 16 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Feikema, Feike
Feikema, Frederick Feikes, VII (birth name)
Manfred, Frederick Feikema
Birthdate
1912-01-06
Date of death
1994-09-07
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Doon, Iowa, USA
Place of death
Luverne, Minnesota, USA
Places of residence
Doon, Iowa, USA
Minnesota, USA
Sioux Falls, South Dakota, USA
Education
Calvin College
Occupations
writer
Organizations
University of South Dakota
Awards and honors
Western Literature Association's Distinguished Achievement Award (1967)
American Academy of Arts and Letters Academy Award (Literature, 1945)
Disambiguation notice
Feike Feikema is the name under which Frederick Manfred wrote before he changed his name legally to Frederick Feikema Manfred.

Members

Reviews

Good book. Lord Grizzly is better.
 
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blueskygreentrees | 1 other review | Jul 30, 2023 |
Hand to hand combat with a grizzly bear. Enough said.
 
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blueskygreentrees | 2 other reviews | Jul 30, 2023 |
The most compelling aspect of 'Conquering Horse' is that similar to Welch's 'Fools Crow' it offers a comprehensive insight into Native American esoterisms as well as psyche and worldview prior to the advent of Europeanisation. But whereas Welch's treatments often have a labored dimension about them (given he deals with cross-cultural interactions in the mould of alien vs. native), Manfred avoids all such pitfalls to render a simplistic motif of an uninterrupted and flowing life untouched by New World paradigms.

'Conquering Horse' is a relation of a quest. A quest undertaken by the lusty warrior No Name who is the second son of the great chief Redbird and is to prove his mettle to the Yankton nation he has been born in. We witness his sexual foibles with the maiden Leaf, her mysterious vanishing, his vision of a quest and his rescue of Leaf and realization of his vision.

This book, it must be remembered, was first written in 1959 ergo Manfred's antiquated prose in some parts. But the entire narrative structure holds up to the test of time with imagery being the most engrossing bait which lures in the reader.

'Conquering Horse' avoids the otherwise cliched trivialization of the white man vs. the Indian or the eco-friendly woke Native relations we find in similar novels. There is only one reference to the white man in No Name's world and that is the first and final say on the matter.

Ultimately, one is imparted a profound lesson by this entire fable; life is simple, life flows and it will continue to flow and be simple long after we are gone. Make sure you have enough time on your hands after reading this book because it will leave you musing on existentiality.
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Amarj33t_5ingh | 1 other review | Jul 8, 2022 |
Very interesting book -- I had no idea why the attack happened at the beginning of the movie or after reading a different account of the story -- but this book tells all. It is recommended by the South Dakota travel site. It was published in 1954. Now I have an entirely different opinion of the movie and Hugh Glass.

The author, Frederick Manfred, spent 10 years researching the story and even crawling areas with his leg tied up with sticks and vines. He went to South Dakota to gather gravel, plants, and other natural things along the path Hugh Glass traveled. He crawled through his yard in Bloomington, MN, as well, as his family watched. He ate ants and grubs.

Really interesting account and I feel like I understood little of the real story before reading this book.
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WiseOwlFactory | 2 other reviews | Feb 20, 2022 |

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Statistics

Works
35
Also by
5
Members
512
Popularity
#48,444
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
10
ISBNs
93

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