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Charles Kuralt's America

Author: Charles Kuralt
Publisher: Thorndike Press
Category: Book

List Price: $25.95
Buy Used: $15.99
You Save: $9.96 (38%)





Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 7038190

Format: Large Print
Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 448
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 5.8 x 1

ISBN: 0786205962
Dewey Decimal Number: 973.92
EAN: 9780786205967
ASIN: 0786205962

Publication Date: November 1996
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Charles Kuralt's America
  • Hardcover - Charles Kuralt's America
  • Audio Cassette - Charles Kuralt's America
  • Audio Download - Charles Kuralt's America
  • Hardcover - Charles Kuralt's America

Similar Items:

  • On the Road with Charles Kuralt
  • A Life on the Road
  • Remembering Charles Kuralt
  • Charles Kuralt's American Moments (American Moment Series)
  • Charles Kuralt's Christmas

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Though he retired from CBS News in 1994, Charles Kuralt has never retired from his wanderings. In this book he sets out to revisit some of his favorite places in their favorite seasons, to rediscover slices of America that have always been closet to his heart. From Montana in September to Alaska in June to Cajun country in winter and along the North Carolina mountains in spring, Kuralt journeys the nation, meeting its people and recording their stories.


Customer Reviews:   Read 4 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The Hobo Philosopher   September 12, 2007
I'm easy on this one. I like Charles Kuralt and I like travel books. I wrote my own travel Book "Hobo-ing America". When I compare my book to his it is easy to see the difference in personalities and "class". Charles Kuralt really writes middle class travel books. He is really not "Route 66", blue collar or working class material. But I understand. You really have to write books for those who can afford to buy them - though Jack Kerouac did pretty well. Charles made a commercial success of his love to travel and he always does it with style, good prose and I would even say poetry. I will always read Charles Kuralt. This book is in the latter part of his career when he was older and even wiser - if that is possible.


4 out of 5 stars A good but not great book   October 14, 2005
I did enjoy this book, but there were parts where I lost interest. Kuralt gives a lot of detail about the people he meets, but sometimes I didn't get as many details as I would have liked about the actual place he visited. In all, it is a book worth reading-- especially if you like to hear stories about individual characters.


5 out of 5 stars "He looked up at a towering tree,and dared to think small."   September 10, 2005

If you've enjoyed Charles Kuralt over the years ,you'll love this book.In 255 pages we are treated to 120 stories about interesting,famous,familiar,personal,human intrest stories and just about anything you might come across if you travelled America as Kuralt did and told us about for so many years.What you should really get from this book is that there is this type of thing all around us,no matter where you go or where you live.One doesn't have to spend their coin,or line up with crowds to see interesting things or meet interesting people.Everyone has a story to tell and every place has it's unusual or interesting points of interest.I have been a long time follower of Ripley's Believe It or Not! ;and that is what Ripley did as he travelled the world to find the unbelievable,unusual,strange or otherwise interesting.
The book will provide a great read for anyone interested in people or things,whether they are young,middle-aged or in their senior years.



5 out of 5 stars Kuralt a Genius   December 11, 2004
Charles Osgood called Kuralt "The only genius that television news ever produced." I'll go with that. People were surprised when Kuralt retired abruptly. We later learned that he was in the process of succumbing to a fatal disease. So Kuralt was not just touring America, he was saying good bye to it. It is a brilliant work.


4 out of 5 stars Third age vagabond   October 25, 2004
Charles Kuralt reads his own work on the audiobook. It seems like he had a lot of fun traveling around the country. People knew him, and then offered to show him around, for example, fly over a glacier in Alaska or have a special interview with a noted saddle maker in New Mexico.

It's nice that he had the money and means to do these things, a kind of third age "On the Road" adventure, but of course without the drugs and revels of Kerouac. And no Cody.

Maybe this was more like Steinbeck's "Travels with Charley."

In fact, Charles is so discreet, he even rebuffs a woman of possible ill repute in Key West. Oh ye of great faith!

But he hardly ever mentions his wife, maybe once or twice at the end. Was she happy just sitting at home? Or maybe she was traveling elsewhere? Anyway, I think it's too bad they could not have traveled together.

It was sad, though, when his father died, even though his father was pretty old (late 80s I think).

Of all the places he visited, I think I did like Key West best, because that was really the place that was furthest away from the American mainstream, except maybe Alaska, and I would prefer to travel outside of the country than in. From Key West, of course, you can get to the Caribbean countries pretty easily. What if he had done that? Diximus.


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