Writer Lisa Jones went to Wyoming for a four-day magazine assignment and came home four years later with a new life.A documentary about Addison, called "Silent Thunder," was produced in 2006.
At a dusty corral on the Wind River Indian Reservation, she met Stanford Addison, (pictured) a Northern Arapaho who seemed to transform everything around him. He gentled horses rather than breaking them by force. It was said that he could heal people of everything from cancer to bipolar disorder. He did all this from a wheelchair; he had been a quadriplegic for more than twenty years.
She listened to his story. Stanford spent his teenage years busting broncs, seducing girls, and dealing drugs. At twenty, he left the house for another night of partying. By morning, a violent accident had robbed him of his physical prowess and left in its place unwelcome spiritual powers -- an exchange so shocking that Stanford spent several years trying to kill himself. But eventually he surrendered to his new life and mysterious gifts.
Broken entwines her story with Stanford's, exploring powerful spirits, material poverty, spiritual wealth, friendship, violence, confusion, death, and above all else,"a love that comes before and after and above and below romantic love."
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Thursday, June 4, 2009
New book chronicles experiences of Native American, quadriplegic "horse whisperer"
From the Web site for Broken: A Love Story: