Browse new releases, best sellers or classics & find your next favourite book. Huge selection of books in all genres. Free UK delivery on eligible orders
- Amazon Prime
Get access to Amazon Prime.
Sign up today!
- New Releases
Check Out Our Newest Releases.
Get The Latest Gear From GP!
- Kindle Ebooks
Shop The Best Kindle Ebooks-At
Amazon.co.uk.
- Best Sellers on Kindle
Browse Our Best Selling
Kindle Books.
- Low priced products
Find low priced products
at Amazon.co.uk
- Digital Subscription
Sign up for a digital
subscription-at amazon.co.uk.
- Amazon Prime
Search results
Dale Van Every (July 23, 1896 in Van, Michigan – May 28, 1976 in Santa Barbara, California) was an American writer, film producer, and studio executive.
Dale Byron Van Every was the author of more than 20 books and movie scripts and an Oscar-nominated screenwriter. He was born 23 July 1896 in Van, Michigan, served with the American Expeditionary Forces during World War 1 and died 28 May 1976 in Santa Barbara, California.
Follow Dale Van Every and explore their bibliography from Amazon.com's Dale Van Every Author Page.
Dale Van Every has 26 books on Goodreads with 1552 ratings. Dale Van Every’s most popular book is Forth to the Wilderness: The First American Frontier: 1...
Dale Van Every has for a number of years been at the task of offering another viewpoint, that of the Westerner too preoccupied to look eastward. (Born in Michigan, Van Every now lives in...
Van Every tells the story of the doomed Natives without resorting either to victim blaming or to minimizing. The monumental (and well nigh miraculous) achievement of Sequoyah in single-handedly creating a writing system for the Cherokee is alone worth reading.
People also ask
Who were Dale Van Every parents?
Who did Dale Van Every marry?
What was William Van Every's first movie?
Who were William Van Every's parents?
Apparently, Mr. Van Every is not familiar with Auschwitz. Although his sympathies lie a little too heavily on the Indian side to make for a truly objective account, the author does give a passable telling of the Cherokee tragedy.