The Wind Blows Free (Used Hardcover, Signed) - Frederick Manfred

The Wind Blows Free (Used Hardcover, Signed) - Frederick Manfred

  • $8.00
    Unit price per 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Only 1 left!

Condition: This book is in Very Good Condition. It is signed by the author with a dedication to the previous owner, dated 8-3-1979. On the title page is handwritten in ink, "#3 of 10 Limited Edition." The cover and pages are in like new condition, clean and unmarked.

The Wind Blows Free, a personal reminiscence of a 1934 hitchhiking trek from Doon, Iowa, to the shining Western mountains, is a trip which the author said 'released his soul.' It is an odyssey of the outsetting novelist, an adventure into some of the beginnings of Frederick Manfred's art. For that reason alone The Wind Blows Free is an important book. But it is also a rich and wonderfully humorous account, a moving picture of the young artist, in which Manfred sits (that's too quiescent a term somehow) for his own portrait. In Vivian, South Dakota, a dust-bowl town of boardwalks and moaning winds, youthful Frederick Feikema Manfred meets Minerva Baxter enroute West with her 1926 Essex and her spinster's phobias. As a condition for his becoming her passenger-driver he must stand for a portrait - this time a chalk outline of his six-foot, nine-inch frame to be drawn by an attendant on a gas-station wall as Miss Minerva's precaution against any criminal ardor latent in the young man. Examining the great human map which results, she pronounces it satisfactory and say it's time to be on their way.

Published 1979 Center for Western Studies