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The culmination of more than sixty years of observing and collecting superstitions, customs, cures, riddles, games, stories, songs, and beliefs Paul Green's Wordbook: An Alphabet of Reminiscence was published in 1990. A personal collection of folk traditions, Paul Green thought that these common idioms served to showcase the heritage of mankind. With roots in eastern North Carolina, Green took inspiration from his peers to write down the traditions of his home state in 1600 pages. The first rendition of Paul Green's Wordbook was released in March 1937 by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and tentatively titled Folk Beliefs and Practices in Central and Eastern North Carolina 1926-28. It took Green most of his life to revise the workbook until it was in its final state in 1990.
Paul Green was born in Lillington, North Carolina, on March 17, 1894. In 1921 he received his B.A. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and the following year married Elizabeth Atkinson Lay. Green's most famous work, for which he received the 1927 Pulitzer Prize, was a drama titled In Abraham's Bosom. Another notable work of Green's was the production of a symphonic drama titled The Lost Colony, which has run for more than fifty years. Paul Green passed away in Chapel Hill on May 4, 1981.
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