Anna lee waldo biography of williams

          I was born in Great Falls, Montana and lived in Whitefish.

        1. American novelist Anna Lee Waldo's epic novel Sacajawea challenges Homer in portraying the coming-of-age of a young Native American Indian woman named Sacajawea.
        2. The author assumes Sacajawea lived a long interesting life of adventures, and follows the more opaque written records of her travels after she left the Lewis.
        3. Anna Lee Waldo wrote the best-selling historical novel, SACAJAWEA.
        4. This book tells the extraordinary life of Sacajawea, a Shoshoni woman.
        5. The author assumes Sacajawea lived a long interesting life of adventures, and follows the more opaque written records of her travels after she left the Lewis....

          Sacajawea (novel)

          1979 novel by Anna Lee Waldo

          Sacajawea is an American historical fictionnovel written by Anna Lee Waldo as a fictionalized biography of Sacajawea, the Shoshone guide employed by Lewis and Clark.

          Published by Avon Books in 1979, portions of the novel were plagiarized from works by Charles McNichols, Frank Waters, Benjamin Capps, Vardis Fisher, Frederick Manfred, among others.[1][2]: 240–242 [3]: 13–24  A revised edition, containing significant changes to the original text, was published in May 1984.

          Production

          The novel was written over a period of ten years according to Waldo.[4][5] In addition to extensive reading, Waldo's research included tracing the Lewis and Clark Trail three times, and pushing her husband, Willis H.

          Waldo, to join the St. Louis Westerners, a chapter of Westerners International.[6][3]: 3–4  The published nove