Her first book made her the “true heir” to Thoreau. But Annie Dillard found new wonders to explore.
Read MoreJULY 4, 1910
When Jack Johnson fought Jim Jeffries on the Fourth, white supremacy took a stunning blow.
Read MoreWhen the “bad break” ended his career — and soon his life — he stepped up to the plate and showed true class. (As seen in “The Pride of the Yankees.”)
Read MoreEveryone knows Rosa and Martin, but there would have been no deep Civil Rights Movement without Ella.
Read MoreSwimming the Panama Canal, flying to Timbuktu, crossing the Alps on an elephant, Richard Halliburton enthralled a housebound America.
Read MoreMale reporters wrote about troops and body counts but “Frankie” FitzGerald saw two clashing cultures and a tragedy unfolding.
Read More2,200 miles from Georgia to Maine, the A.T. is a culture on foot, with its own “trail magic.”
Read MoreCoast-to-coast? Done that. So Matt Green set out to walk New York. Every borough. Every street. Every pier and park. Eight years and 8,000 miles later. . . (As seen in “The World Beneath My Feet.”)
Read MoreFor two years, America’s poet laureate reached out to the nation. The nation reached back.
Read MoreAt the end of the Freud-filled 1920s, James Thurber and E.B. White launched their careers with a silly question and a spoof.
Read More“I have met with but one or two persons in the course of my life who understood the art of Walking.” — Thoreau
Read MoreGALLUP, NEW MEXICO — Face-to-face with honor and a Navajo tradition of silence.
Read MoreWalking, American style, is often a coast-to-coast journey. But it isn’t about the feet.
Read MoreWhen Will Durant asked the wise about “the meaning of life,” he got the usual answers. Then he asked a prisoner.
Read MoreFrom a rooftop vision to a counterculture bible, Stewart Brand sowed the seeds of several revolutions.
Read MoreYou may think football a grim sport, but meet Alex Karras, "a clown with a fine sense of timing." And, BTW, Hitler's husband.
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