"Read Kuralt's words and discover America with him." UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL He has entertained and informed us about ourselves on television for years. Taking to the highways, he has met the little-known and the famous, and shared them with the rest of us. This heartwarming book reminds us again of some of the extraordinary people he has met over the years in words and photographs, and provides the exact words of the interviews, so that we can permanently enjoy his visits with people we have come to know and care for, again and again. "From the Paperback edition.
The popular TV newsman and commentator chronicles his early days in the media, the rise of his career, and the richly diverse people he has encountered and the places he has been over the years
The author presents an account of some of his travels in search of quintessentially American people and places
Describes the intriguing characters the journalist met on his travels
"As a child, he was already mature and focused, full of ambition. He would grow into an unusually articulate college student, known equally for his intelligence and his fun-loving nature....
Two native sons celebrate the state's four hundredth birthday
Charles Kuralt, bestselling author and inveterate traveler, takes a nostalgic trip back to his early years in the South, sharing the phenomena that has made the Southern spirit what it...
A collection of award-winning newspaper columns written in 1956, at the beginning of Kuralt's journalistic career, presents stories of the ordinary people of Charlotte, North Carolina.
Lawrence J. Taylor and Maeve Hickey explore the road between Tucson, Arizona and Nogales, Mexico talking to street urchins, mariachi bands, ranchers, cowboys, and waitresses about life along the road.
Readers trust the series to provide authoritative texts enhanced by introductions and notes by distinguished scholars and contemporary authors, as well as up-to-date translations by award-winning translators.
Charles Kuralt. but an infinity of stumps . It was a horrible sight , but what made it worse was a sign that was placed by the side of the road in front of this devastation . The sign said , “ Good Forest Management for a Growing ...