Honestly....a "My bio" blurb written in the third person doesn't really prove that he's claiming anything.
Then who do you think
wrote "My Bio"? Third-person is standard format.
Also the title "Native American Shamanism Examiner" is also kind of dubious proof of anything.
His sequel
Sweet Medicine is flacked with the blurb: "A novel of modern confrontation between Indians and Anglos, by the
Native American author of
The Powwow Highway". (Google Search: <
http://tinyurl.com/daveseals-faux-na-author>)
You think they snuck
that through without his approval?
<
http://www.ragbaby.com/magazine/19990618c.htm>: The Peace Pipe in Powwow Highway
"Based on the 1979 novel by David Seals,
a member of the American Indian Movement (AIM) and
the Cheyenne Nation,...."
Who gave them
that idea? Do you think they just made it up?
<
http://www.ipl.org/div/natam/bin/browse.pl/A461>:
Native American Authors Project
"David Seals , 1947-
"
Huron"Davydd ap Saille (the spelling used by the author) is a talented
Huron novelist, publisher (Sky and Sage Books), freelance journalist, playwright, and documentary video producer."
Who do you think provided them with all
that info?
<
http://www.coloradoaim.org/why.html> -- footnote # 11:
"As the noted Paiute poet/novelist Adrian C. Lewis put it in a letter to Churchill on Sept. 21, 1992 (copy on file), '
David Seals...now has a sequel to
Pow Wow Highway out. Although he claims AIM connections, etc., he
is really not an Indian. He's a new age weirdo and a terrible writer at that.'"
Despite all those claims, "David Seals...is really not an Indian."
So
somebody's been telling a lot of lies, haven't they?
Who?