Michael Blake (author)

Michael Lennox Blake (July 5, 1945 – May 2, 2015) was an American author, best known for the film adaptation of his novel Dances With Wolves, for which he won an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.

Biography

Early in his life, Blake's family lived in Texas, before moving to Southern California, where they moved frequently. He began writing while serving in the U.S. Air Force during the Vietnam War when he was stationed at Walker Air Force Base, where he wrote for the base newspaper. He studied journalism at the University of New Mexico, and later studied at a film school in Berkeley, California. He also attended Eastern New Mexico University in Portales. In the late 1970s, he moved to Los Angeles; during the 1980s, only one of his screenplays was produced, called Stacy's Knights which starred Kevin Costner, who later encouraged him to continue to write, and introduced him to key figures in the Hollywood Industry. Dances with Wolves was the result; Kevin Costner then asked him to write a screenplay for the film based on the novel. He went on to do humanitarian work, and continued to write.

Blake died on May 2, 2015, after a long illness in Tucson, Arizona.

Works

Screenplays

Novels

  • Dances with Wolves (1988) Fawcett Gold MedalISBN 0-449-13448-2
  • Airman Mortensen (1991) Seven Wolves PublishingISBN 0-9627387-7-8
  • Marching to Valhalla (1996) Villard BooksISBN 0-679-44864-0
  • The Holy Road (2001) Villard BooksISBN 0-679-44866-7
  • Into the Stars (2011) ZOVA BooksISBN 978-0-615-51053-8

Non-fiction

  • Like a Running Dog (2002) (autobiography)
  • Indian Yell (2006)
  • Twelve the King (2009)

Awards

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Michael Blake (author), released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.