Describes the intriguing characters the journalist met on his travels
The author shares his remarkable journey to slices of America that have been closest to his heart.
Ninety-two brief essays describe rural and small town America and its horsetraders, pioneers, bridge builders, blacksmiths, moonshiners, prospectors, fishermen, and eccentrics
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
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.
Hundreds of eyewitness accounts of great moments in American history include Langston Hughes on the Scottsboro boys, Jack London on the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, and other chronicles of the Salem witch trials and the Scopes trial
Dateline America
“ We recognize the legitimate and indeed exigent interest of States and localities throughout the Nation in preventing the dissemination of material deemed harmful to children , ” Justice William J. Brennan wrote in the Court's judgment ...
In celebration of North Carolina's 400th birthday, Charles Kuralt collaborated with another of the state's famous sons, Loonis McGlohon, to produce this down-home, witty celebration of their native land. From...
Kalb joins a cast of legendary figures in telling this story of the early days of the Cold War and broadcast news, from Murrow to Eric Severeid, Howard K. Smith, Richard Hottelet, Charles Kuralt, and Daniel Schorr, among many others—men ...
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...