|
Books > Health, Home & Family > Gardening > Floral crafts > General
Best known for Our Southern Highlanders (1913) and Camping and
Woodcraft (1916), Horace Kephart's keen interest in exploring and
documenting the great outdoors would lead him not only to settle in
Bryson City, North Carolina, but also to become the most
significant writer about the Great Smoky Mountains in the early
twentieth century. Edited by Mae Miller Claxton and George
Frizzell, Horace Kephart: Writings extends past Kephart's two
well-read works of the early 1900s and dives into his
correspondence with friends across the globe, articles and columns
in national magazines, unpublished manuscripts, journal entries,
and fiction in order to shed some deserved light on Kephart's
classic image as a storyteller and practical guide to the Smokies.
The book is divided into thematic subsections that call attention
to the variety in Kephart's writings, its nine chapters featuring
Kephart's works on camping and woodcraft, guns, southern
Appalachian culture, fiction, the Cherokee, scouting, and the park
and Appalachian trail. Each chapter is accompanied by an
introductory essay by a notable Appalachian scholar providing
context and background to the included works. Written for scholars
interested in Appalachian culture and history, followers of the
modern outdoor movement, students enamored of the Great Smoky
Mountains, and general readers alike, Horace Kephart: Writings
gathers a plethora of little-known and rarely seen material that
illustrates the diversity and richness found in Kephart's work.
|
|