The late Charlotte Hilton Green was an early and influential
champion of the Tar Heel state's natural environment, and her
popular weekly column, 'Out-of-Doors in Carolina,' appeared in the
Raleigh
News and Observer for forty-two years (1932-74). A
classic in the field of popular nature writing,
Birds of the
South was originally published by UNC Press in 1933, preceding
by a year Roger Tory Peterson's landmark volume,
A Field Guide
to the Birds.
In this engaging collection of her early newspaper columns, Green
details more than sixty varieties of birds common to southern
gardens, fields, and woods. Quotations, poems, and anecdotes
complement the descriptions of each species and help to make the
book accessible even to novice nature lovers.
In a new introduction and appendix, Eloise Potter highlights
Green's enduring contribution to nature study and brings the book's
scientific information up to date.