Description
Condition
GOOD: This issue of “The History Magazine for Young People” is in good condition, showing some signs of use and wear. The pages are free of writing. The previous owner’s address label has been covered.
Product Details
Since this issue is from the 1980s, it is in black-and-white, rather than in today’s full-color issues. The content, however, is still relevant.
From the introduction: “How do you perceive where you live? In this month’s issue, we not only introduce you to the South as seen by its leading artists—writers, painters, sculptors, craftspeople, songwriters, photographers, architects, filmmakers, and chefs—but we ask you to … think about your geographic area. What does it mean to you, and how would you describe it to others?”
FEATURES
- Early Artists of the South
- From Buzzard Lope to Break Dancing
- Southern Pecan Kisses (recipe)
- The Confederate Image: Art of the Civil War South
- ‘The Cotton Bloom’ (song)
- William Faulkner: Champion of the South
- Plaited Place Mats (activity)
- The Grand Old Singing South
- Knoxville: Summer, 1915
- Black Folk Artists of the South
- What Makes Your Region Special?
DEPARTMENTS
- Dear Ebenezer
- The Crow’s Nest
- Elsewhere
- Ebenezer’s Teasers
- Digging Deeper
- Books to Read
- Films
- Places to Visit
- From the Archives (back issues)
- Cracker’s Capers
- Event in History