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On the Road with Charles Kuralt

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Charles Kuralt's classic best seller is now on audio!

"To read the front pages, you might conclude that Americans are mostly out for themselves...but you can't travel the back roads very long without discovering a multitude of gentle people doing good for others with no expectation of gain or recognition."

In this collection of short audio essays, Charles Kuralt takes us from the countryside to the big cities to introduce us to the fascinating people and places that only he could find. Kuralt captures the humor and compassion of ordinary people leading extraordinary lives.

From the best-selling book On the Road with Charles Kuralt, these classic stories represent Kuralt's defining, and perhaps finest, work. Never before released on audio, this collection ensures that his unforgettable voice will be heard by generations to come.

Audible Audio

First published January 1, 1985

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About the author

Charles Kuralt

56 books24 followers
Charles Kuralt was an award-winning American journalist. He was most widely known for his long career with CBS, first for his "On the Road" segments on The CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite, and later as the first anchor of CBS News Sunday Morning, a position he held for fifteen years.

Kuralt's "On the Road" segments were recognized twice with personal Peabody Awards. The first, awarded in 1968, cited those segments as heartwarming and "nostalgic vignettes"; in 1975, the award was for his work as a U.S. "bicentennial historian"; his work "capture[d] the individuality of the people, the dynamic growth inherent in the area, and ...the rich heritage of this great nation." He shared in a third Peabody awarded to CBS News Sunday Morning.

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5 stars
110 (31%)
4 stars
153 (44%)
3 stars
70 (20%)
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10 (2%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews
Profile Image for Jessaka.
1,003 reviews222 followers
December 1, 2021
This is moe than just a travel book because the purpose of the author's travel ws to meet interesting people and talk about them. I have always wished that there would be a TV program that did this, and he had his own TV show years ago, but I don't recall it. We could use one now in our times of turmoil.

He met interesting people like a doctor that only charged $3 per office visit and often took food in exchange. Then one I really liked was a man who, in his childhood, never had a bicycle, so he now repaired throwaway bicycles and loaned them out to kids for free. The list goes on and on.
Profile Image for Wendy.
16 reviews
July 17, 2011
I always loved the brief snippets by Charles Kuralt on the Sunday show. Sometimes we would be late to church waiting for his piece to run but didn't get yelled at because my Dad was waiting for the piece to air too; they were that good.

I read this book on my honeymoon in Cabo San Lucas. I vividly remember reading it while lounging in the shallow end of a beautiful pool with a disappearing edge that dropped right into ocean; pure paradise.

The stories in this book were so sweet and beautifully written. Many made me want to pack up and head home to the America and the Americans he describes.

Quick easy read that I am sure you would enjoy.
Profile Image for Heidi.
340 reviews2 followers
January 29, 2010
Such a comforting and happy book- the idea of hopping in your car, driving down back roads and through small towns, and discovering wonderful characters and magical places. Boy, am I in the mood for a road trip!
1 review1 follower
February 2, 2014
My family ("Thanksgiving") is featured in this book, so it will always be one of my favorites!
41 reviews
August 1, 2017
It is a very short book, which I enjoyed and brought back memories from when I listened to him in the 80's and 90's.
Profile Image for Ellen Behrens.
Author 9 books20 followers
May 19, 2023
As full-time RVers with fourteen years under the wheels, my husand and I have covered a good bit of the country. We haven't put anywhere near the number of miles oher RVers have, but we've certainly seen our share of places and met many fascinating people (we've also met some pretty awful folks, but let's keep this review in the positive territory).

If I were a bit more outgoing, perhaps we could have collected a few tales as fascinating as those Charles Kuralt has collected in this distillment of his many years On the Road for CBS, exploring the byways of this country and introducing the rest of America to the wonderful people he met, showing us the what we wouldn't otherwise see in our own living rooms forty years ago or more.

Reading his profiles and travelogues, I couldn't help wondering whatever happened to these people (like Alan Silverstone, "The Gumball King") or how much some places might have changed (is the lonely tree along US 50 near Delta, Colorado, still being decorated for Christmas?). And where are our little-recognized heroes today? Not the folks who garner all kinds of attention on social media for their causes (not a bad thing, don't get me wrong), but people like Jethro Mann from Belmont, North Carolina, who used to fix bicycles and give them away to local kids who couldn't afford to buy one; or Agatha Burgess of Buffalo, South Carolina, who got up at five every morning and started cooking so she could feed anyone who came by who needed a meal. Not to a soup kitchen, mind you, but her own home.
Who would do that today?!?

So Kuralt's book is a reminder of when people could literally open their homes to strangers, who gave freely of their time and talents to benefit others. I loved every bit of this book, and it made me miss his casual way with people, his ability to create trust so strangers would open up to him and share their stories.

The world could use a Charles Kuralt today. A reporter whose stories were about the subjects he was interviewing, the places he was visiting--and not about him. Because, though he didn't intend it, plenty of Charles Kuralt comes through anyway, and we are all the better for it.
Profile Image for Lkelly6.
100 reviews6 followers
August 8, 2024
A Life on the Road
by Charles Kuralt

10 September 1934 - 04 July 1997
Wilmington, NC - New York City, NY

Take this charming book with you on your next trip. The airplane miles or the long airport layover will fly like minutes instead of dragging by hours. Read the list of chapters in the Contents. You can read them out of order if you like because Kuralt doesn't organize chronologically after introducing his life beginnings.
Kuralt explains how he got into print journalism, then radio, then into early-days television reporting. His gentle personality and broad curiosity never quite jelled with the action-calamity-muckraking style of modern News Reporting. To travel the USA, finding good-news stories to report was his own idea, and he managed to persuade CBS News President Dick Salant to finance him and cameraman Jim Wilson on a 3-month trip around the USA to see what they could see and portray for the news.
What a grand time Charlie and his various crew had for 600+ episodes of amazing Americana television, so good that every episode has been preserved carefully and is still used.
What I really like about On The Road, the book as well as the television shows, is how uncontrived are the stories. When present-day groups present similar stories, it seems they all have been over-laid with Reality TV - that pervasive photogenic Kardashian style.
This is a terrific slow Read.
Profile Image for Dan Smith.
1,795 reviews17 followers
February 9, 2023
Even though this book was copyrighted in 1985, it was a thrill to hear the stories about people who continue to make this country the greatest. I got to read about a man who made handmade bricks for over 50 years, a story about a pharmacy where, after a person has consumed 100 cups of coffee, they paint your name on a cup and put it on a shelf for only that person to use as long as he is alive. There is the story of a family from Mississippi, who started out as workers on a farm, but who taught their 7 children to work hard-All seven were college graduates with advanced degrees. And then there is a story of a lost dog who sat by the side of the road waiting on his previous owner to come back and get him until one day he was hit by a car. The community had taken care of him for months.. and in his death, erected a headstone where he is buried.

Charles Kuralt 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.
Profile Image for Rini Cobbey.
47 reviews7 followers
July 7, 2017
Read through my 2017 eyes, the vignette collection is occasionally sweet, rarely--though not never--provocative, and always repetitive. Besides a few gestures at poverty, which is never confronted, just overcome through good will--none of the stories incorporates conflict. It's a picture of the people on the back roads of the US that is too comfortable in nostalgia and its yearning for authortative, meaningful, cohesive, harmonious pastness: The Past and The Old Ways which must be glorified because goshdarnit they're the good ol' guys. The book works as it's designed, in spurts of short and vivid anecdotes. But if I weren't reading it to get some genre context for a comparable current project I'm editing, I'd have had no drive to keep reading to the end.
Profile Image for Glenn Cassel.
1 review2 followers
October 6, 2021
I read this book while deployed aboard USS Ranger to the Indian Ocean in 1980-1981. The one chapter is close to me and that is the one about The Saddest Place I Know. I have a distant relative who was killed in action at the Little Bighorn, Pvt. Richard Dorn is on the marker. I am a native of Montana originally from the Hi Line but have lived in the Yellowstone Country in both Forsyth and Billings.
Profile Image for Robert A.
245 reviews2 followers
January 27, 2022
I guess I could give it a 5 star but while reading it I just kept thinking of the double life that Kuralt was living. I always liked his stories when he was on T.V. but after he died the world found out he had a squeeze on the side for 30 years. Basically another life and wife. But this has nothing to do with the stories themselves just my own problem.
Profile Image for Van Reese.
325 reviews2 followers
October 11, 2024
I remember growing up occasionally listening to On the Road with Charles Kuralt on the evening news, so I was glad to get a copy of this book and read some of the stories. The stories are dated, but are still quite interesting. This is the kind of book that you can sit back in your living room and read about extraordinary people and discover new places.
Profile Image for F.
1,151 reviews11 followers
May 26, 2017
without meaning to do it Kuralt sums up the mindset difference between legal immigrants and illegal immigrants in Chapter 9, Seasons, the section on July 4th. That alone was worth the price of the book- or, getting it from a library and reading it.
Profile Image for Rick Fifield.
376 reviews
February 8, 2024
A nice compendium of Kuralt's years on the road remember various subjects. What is amazing is that this book was written in 1985 and Kuralt had another 12 years of stories left to go. A wonderful selection of stories.
16 reviews
May 18, 2025
I laughed many times, I cried a few times, I remembered many times. I totally love this book. I wondered several times where those people are now (40! Years after the book was written). They are alive again in the reader’s mind. Permanent.
Profile Image for Alex Chen.
6 reviews
July 21, 2025
“There are probably no lessons in any of this but I know that in the future whenever I hear that the family is a dying institution, I’ll think of them. Whenever I hear anything in America is impossible, I’ll think of them.”
Profile Image for Chad.
281 reviews
January 21, 2022
He’s an American gem, some nice background on how Charles Kuralt gained the ability to take these assignments. Several bits from his travels across the country. You just gotta love it.
Profile Image for Dano.
203 reviews1 follower
April 30, 2025
Top 10 books I’ve read in the past year. Loved it.
10 reviews1 follower
August 25, 2025
I enjoyed the author’s telling of interesting people in small towns scattered across America who are giving, kind, have dealt with so much, and have made a positive difference for others.
Profile Image for David Horn.
Author 3 books3 followers
June 1, 2013
This book collects a number of Kuralt's pieces that he prepared for CBS news as he drove around the US looking for interesting stories to tell the news viewing public. One thing Kurlat can do well is tell a story. In the space of two minutes (TV time) he could really paint a picture and this book is full of interesting people and pictures of an America that no longer exists.

My favorite story is about Bill Bodisch, a 68 year old Iowa farmer, who never keen about farming always wanted to sail around the world. Bill Bodisch built a 68 foot boat from scratch (using materials he had available to him) in his barnyard, and he and his wife auctioned off the farm and all their property and began their journey around the world.
Profile Image for Carol Merrill.
58 reviews
March 20, 2009
I liked this book because of the "feel good" factor. Charles Kuralt traveled around and talked to ordinary people who are always extraordinary in some way, like we all are. This is a collection of stories about some of the people and things that he has encountered. One of my favorite parts, that I always remember, is when a man walks out his front door and is upset that he walked through a spiderweb and got it all over himself. Then it is pointed out, how about the spider who took all day to create that web. I like looking at things in this way when I think things are going badly for me. There is always a bigger picture.
Profile Image for B.C. Kowalski.
Author 7 books4 followers
March 30, 2016
It's a great slice of an Americana I think that's gotten lost. Charles Kuralt had a knack for teasing out those great feature stories. Sure, he's cherry picking the good parts, but it's nice reading these stories of people self-sacrificing, or just quirky. The photography in the book is horrendous, and you'll often think you wish you could get a good look at the people he's talking to. And sometimes the fact that these are transcripts of TV segments mean it can occasionally be missed an important visual cue. Despite that, On the Road is a tremendous read and should be required of any aspiring feature writer.
28 reviews
November 3, 2007
This was a light read, very pleasant. Kuralt is a nice person to spend a few hours with. Not to be read with serious literature in mind, but rather a relaxing visit with a warm, thoughtful companion who shares his adventures.
2,403 reviews7 followers
November 24, 2009
While I like listening to Kuralt's vignettes, this was a little different. It did not read as essay rather was just a written transcript of some of his interviews. But I love reading about the places he's been and things he's seen.
Profile Image for George King.
177 reviews
November 7, 2023
This book should be required reading for all Americans and should be required reading in schools. It demonstrates how Americans used to behave towards one another. It is a good antidote against Maga Republicans.
Profile Image for Claire.
1,250 reviews11 followers
June 12, 2009
Sweet snippets of stories from his show. Charles Kuralt was a sweet man.
2 reviews
September 12, 2011
Nice little read. A look back on the way things used be done in TV News. Some good points on writing and perceiving..but NOT ENOUGH on the why's and how's of things. A wistful read.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews

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