Sondra Sampson, a proud Lumbee woman and Deaf author from Laurinburg, North Carolina, is using storytelling to give voice to grief, survival, and Indigenous identity.
Deaf since 18 months old due to spinal meningitis, Sampson spent years in silence before discovering the power of sign language. But even in that quiet, she was deeply attuned—to her mother’s sorrow, her community’s resilience, and the land that shaped her.
“I didn’t grow up seeing Deaf Native girls in books,” Sampson told Native News Online. “So I became the woman who wrote them.”
Now a mother of five and a graduate of the Model Secondary School for the Deaf in Washington, D.C., Sampson has carved her own path in publishing through her imprint, Silent Feather Press.
“The feather represents healing, presence, and connection,” she explained. “It’s more than a logo—it’s the spirit behind my work.”
Her latest book, Luski’s Silent Girl, tells the story of Tala, a Deaf Lumbee girl who survives a tragic fire that claims her father’s life. Guided by a mysterious black wolf named Luski, Tala embarks on a journey of justice and healing.
Sampson’s debut, Signs from the Spirit, is a spiritual memoir honoring her late father, Charles Graham Sampson. She followed it with The Sign of Victoria, a supernatural thriller exploring ancestral trauma and buried truths.
“These stories are more than just books,” she said. “They’re medicine. They preserve Lumbee identity, share the Deaf experience, and make space for voices often left out of Native literature.”
Recently, Sampson visited the Lumbee Tribal Office to present a copy of Signs from the Spirit to Tribal Chairman John Lowery. She explained that the book was written to help others navigate grief. Moved by her gift, Chairman Lowery—an avid reader himself—presented Sampson with one of his charge coins and told her she had inspired him to start writing.
Joined by two of her five children, Sampson also shared that she’s already working on her next book. Her titles are available through Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other major retailers.
Beyond writing, Sampson is a passionate advocate for H.R. 474—the Lumbee Recognition Act—and uses her platform to raise awareness about the ongoing fight for full federal recognition.
“As a Deaf woman, I know what it means to be unheard,” she said. “That’s why I speak through my work. I believe books, stories, and Native media can help lead this movement.”

