1. Cindy Lovell was born on 1956 and is an American educator and writer.

1. Cindy Lovell was born on 1956 and is an American educator and writer.
Cindy Lovell graduated from Stetson University with a BA and MA in elementary education and from the University of Iowa with a Ph.
Cindy Lovell has two children, Angela Lovell and Adam Lovell.
Cindy Lovell is known for her work in support of Mark Twain's legacy.
In Hannibal, Cindy Lovell oversaw the restoration of the Becky Thatcher House, established the quadrennial Clemens Conference, and facilitated numerous other projects.
Currently, Cindy Lovell is the director of education at Epic Flight Academy in New Smyrna Beach, Florida.
Cindy Lovell is an adjunct professor teaching education courses for the University of South Florida and a Mark Twain course for Quincy University.
Additionally, Cindy Lovell is an adjunct professor in the Trulaske College of Business at the University of Missouri.
Cindy Lovell served as director for the City of Hannibal's bicentennial year in 2019 and is a member of the steering committee for the American Writers Museum.
Cindy Lovell's narratives were performed by Jimmy Buffett, Clint Eastwood, Garrison Keillor, and Angela Lovell.
Cindy Lovell wrote the narrative tracks for Orthophonic Joy: The 1927 Bristol Sessions Revisited, another double-album project with Jackson, which was a benefit for the Birthplace of Country Music Museum in Bristol, Tennessee.
Cindy Lovell has been a contributor to HuffPost and other publications, such as Mensa Research Journal and Florida Reading Quarterly.
Cindy Lovell contributed chapters to Reading in 2010: A Comprehensive Review of a Changing Field, Mark Twain and Youth: Studies in His Life and Writings, and Critical Insights: The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.
Cindy Lovell is a co-editor and author of Preparing the Way: Teaching ELs in the PreK-12 Classroom.
Cindy Lovell co-authored Linguistics for K-12 Classroom Application and The Big Book of ESOL Activities: Preparation for Educators, Administrators, and School Counselors with Jane Govoni.
Cindy Lovell has authored two children's novel, Rachel Mason Hears the Sound and Not This Sunday.
Cindy Lovell co-authored Down the Mississippi with CNN iReporter Neal Moore.
Cindy Lovell wrote the afterword for 101 Trailblazing Women of Air and Space.
Cindy Lovell has lectured widely on the subject of Mark Twain at a number of venues such as Oxford University, Kensal Rise Library, and the National Steinbeck Center.
Cindy Lovell is an annual speaker on the American Queen steamboat's Mark Twain cruise and has lectured at numerous educational conferences and symposia.
Interviews with Cindy Lovell have appeared on C-SPAN and CNN and in The New York Times, The New Yorker, Smithsonian Magazine, and other publications.
Cindy Lovell made news around the world when she discovered the long-sought boyhood signature of Samuel Langhorne Clemens on July 26,2019 inside the Mark Twain Cave in Hannibal, Missouri, where Clemens lived from the age of 4 to 17.