Frederick Manfred

Frederick Feikema Manfred (January 6, 1912 – September 7, 1994) was a noted Western author.

Manfred was born in Doon, Iowa. He was baptized Frederick Feikes Feikema, VII, and he used the name Feike Feikema when he published his first books. According to Alvin Plantinga, Manfred thought that he would have a hard time being taken seriously by the Eastern establishment with a name like "Feike Feikema", so he elected to change his name to Frederick Manfred. He was the individual who coined the popular term, Siouxland, for the immediate area around his home area of Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

From 1940 – 1942, he was a patient at Glen Lake Sanatorium in Minnesota. He met his future wife, Maryanna Shorba, at the sanatorium. He fictionalized this period in his book, Boy Almighty, published under the name Feike Feikema.

For a time he lived in a house which is now the interpretive center of Blue Mounds State Park in Rock County, Minnesota. He attended Calvin College in Michigan.

Manfred died in Luverne, Minnesota, in 1994, at the age of 82.[1]

Fiction

Note: There are also a handful of non-fiction titles, notably The Wind Blows Free, a memoir of the Dust Bowl, Conversations with Frederick Manfred, and Prime Fathers and Duke's Mixture, anthologies of FM's essays.

Notes

References

Robert C. Wright, Frederick Manfred (Twayne's United States Authors series ; TUSAS 336)