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Stan Lynde

Date de décès: Mardi, 6 août 2013

Nombre de Lecteurs: 326

PseudonymeStan Lynde

SpécialitéAmerican comic artist, painter, novelist

Date de naissance23 septembre 1931

Date de décès 6 août 2013

Stan Lynde was born in Billings, Montana. He attended elementary, middle and high school at Lodge Grass, working on the ranch and traveling with the family wherever his father’s business, sheep-raising, took them. During his early years, he lived with his parents in “every kind of dwelling you can imagine, from a sheep wagon, to a tent, dugout, line shack, cabin, and ranch house.”
He attended the University of Montana at Missoula, Montana, served during the Korean War with the Navy on the island of Guam and on board the submarine tender U.S.S. Sperry.

In 1955 Lynde was discharged from the navy. After an attempt at ranching and working for a newspaper in Colorado Springs, he moved to New York City in 1956. He was employed by the Wall Street Journal, and took art classes at night.
Lynde created the comic strip Rick O'Shay in 1958, and it was a huge critical and commercial success. It was set in the west and mixed humor with strong storytelling. After a dispute with the syndicate, Lynde left the strip in 1977.
Stan was co-founder and a director of The Great Montana Centennial Cattle Drive which celebrated Montana’s centennial with a 60 mile cattle drive from Roundup, Montana to Billings. The six-day drive featured 2,812 cattle, 3,337 horses, 208 wagons, and 105 of the state’s top cowboys.
In 1979, Lynde returned with another comic strip, called Latigo, starring Cole 'Latigo' Cantrell. His father was a mountain man and his mother a Crow Indian. The daily strip was launched on June 25, 1979, joined by a Sunday strip, on July 1, 1979. It was not a great commercial success however, and ended in 1983. In 1984 and 1985, Lynde produced the weekly panel Grass Roots which was revived in 1998.A comic by Stan Lynde
Lynde has written 5 novels: The Bodacious Kid in 1996, Careless Creek in 1998, Vigilante Moon in 2003, Saving Miss Julie in 2004 and Marshal of Medicine Lodge in 2005.
Stan Lynde and his wife Lynda founded Cottonwood Publishing so he could publish books reprinting his comics, and new material (primarily western novels). In 2002, Lynde returned with another exclusive comic for Fantomen; Bad Bob which is about a hopeless Wild West criminal.

Stan calls himself “a westerner by birth and inclination” and his work aptly reflects his life-long interest in the history, lore, and legend of the American west. He is a member of the Western Writers of America, and is a recipient of the Inkpot Award for Achievement in the Comic Arts, as well as the Montana Governor’s Award for the Arts. He lives in Helena, Montana with his wife Lynda.

Source: Wikipedia.org

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