Está atualmente a visualizar o Portugal versão do sítio.
Gostaria de mudar para o seu sítio local?
8 TEMPO DE LEITURA MIN

PASSPORT TO PUBLICATION

Simon Whaley, who successfully freelances writing travel articles, packs his bags to ask three writers about the business of being a travel writer

The American travel documentarian Anthony Bourdain said, ‘Travel is not a reward for working, it’s education for living.’

While a break away at this time of year can be a great way for us to recharge our batteries and top up the creative well, Anthony Bourdain’s quote is even more apt for some writers. Travel is not just an education for living, it’s how they earn their living.

There are plenty of perks to travel writing. I’ve had to endure overnight stays in luxury five-star country houses, cope with free first-class rail travel and free access to many tourist attractions. But there’s hard work too. On one press trip, my promised 15-minute sit-down interview with the head butler, turned into a five-minute chat in the sweltering kitchens as he busied himself with the evening meal because the other dozen journalists over-ran their time slots.

But if you’re prepared to be flexible and open to opportunities, travel writing could become your passport to publication.

Setting off

There are about as many ways to break into this market as there are travel routes around the world. Steve Newman is a travel writer based in the North East, and he fell into travel writing via his local GP practice.

‘I was in the doctor’s surgery and saw a copy of a cruising magazine. I had just come back from a holiday in Menorca and had taken pictures of cruise ships, so I wrote to the editor asking if he would like to see something. It just went on from there.’

Leia o artigo completo e muitos outros nesta edição da Writing Magazine
Opções de compra abaixo
Se for o dono da questão, Iniciar sessão para ler o artigo completo agora.
Edição digital única July 2023
 
€6,99 / issue
Esta edição e outras edições anteriores não estão incluídas numa nova inscrição. As assinaturas incluem a edição regular mais recente e as novas edições lançadas durante sua assinatura. Writing Magazine
Assinatura digital anual €69,99 facturado anualmente
Guardar
17%
€5,83 / issue
Assinatura digital de 6 meses €35,99 facturado duas vezes por ano
Guardar
14%
€6,00 / issue

Este artigo é de...


View Issues
Writing Magazine
July 2023
VER NA LOJA

Outros artigos desta edição


Writing Magazine
Contact Mark
mark.dean@warnersgroup.co.uk
TLC
www.literaryconsultancy.co.uk
Masthead
WELCOME
Tina Jackson Content Editor It’s a pleasure to
Creative Writing
THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY
How do you write characters who are difficult to like? Bestselling author Alka Joshi looks at the good, the bad and the ugly, and explains why novels need all three
Walking the writer’s path:Inspiration
In this new three-part series, Leon Conrad, author of Story and Structure: A complete guide shares some thoughts on three aspects of the writing process: inspiration, structure, and plot – from his practice as a writer and story structure enthusiast
Trick yourself into writing
Jumping without a safety net into the unknown is where you’ll find the real joy of creativity, says author Steve Aylett, which is why he has created The Trickster Brick of prompts – treasure from the great beyond to spark your wildest ideas
Creative Writing Workshops
Flesh on the bones
Have you written short stories, and now want to attempt a novel? As her debut novel is published, Sheila Armstrong, the author of acclaimed short story collection How to Gut a Fish, looks at the process of moving from short fiction to long
Your writing critiqued
James McCreet applies his forensic criticism to the beginning of a reader’s manuscript
IN A NUTSHELL
Keeping the wordcount down can serve your children’s writing in many different ways. Amy Sparkes looks at the benefits of keeping the kernels short and sweet.
Spirit OF THE TIMES
How do you evoke the zeigeist in your fiction? Helen Walters looks at ways you can conjure a significant time or event in your fiction, with a short story by Kevin Barry
Work it out
The workplace offers valuable seams for poets to explore, as Alison Chisholm reveals via an expressive poem about memories of working in the probation service
Sonic attack
What can auditory elements add to your horror writing? Alex Davis explores the sound of fear in fiction
Community and Competitions
GEORGE ORWELL’S CHILTERNS
In this new occasional column Lizzie Enfield, writer and walking tour leader, follows in the footsteps of a particular writer and shows us the literary landscape they inhabited
Show up FOR YO U R WRITING
Do you think you, or your work, aren’t good enough? Even after publishing success, negative thoughts can stop your creative flow. Author Livi Michael passes on her advice for when self-doubt threatens to derail your process
Novel Ideas
Teacher turns up trumps
The world of writing
Labours of love come up against book bashers and readers’ news and views in this month’s world of writing
IN THE SPOT LIGHT: YOUR WRITING
The Book That Made Me Want to Write
Subscribers’ news
SHARE YOUR SUCCESS To feature in subscribers’ news
Interviews and Profiles
CARO GILES
The author of creative non-fiction talks to Lynne Hackles about being inspired by the landscape and the structure of the lunar cycles
NADIA ATTIA
The debut author describes the witches’ brew of elements that went into the creation of her spellbinding novel of a divided kingdom, Verge
HANNAH ROTHSC HILD
The writer, documentary maker, businesswoman and award-winning satirical novelist picks five books that have left a lasting impression on her
Sue Moorcroft
Margaret James talks to the commercial fiction novelist about balancing messy planning with the demands of being contracted to deliver two books a year
Star Interview
OUT OF THIS WORLD
Mat Osman, author of The Ghost Theatre, talks to Tina Jackson about bringing the stage to life in his alternative version of Elizabethan London, and the relationship between writing and his career as a musician
Creative Writing Building Blocks
Writing WITH COURAGE
Roll up your sleeves, says author and tutor Ian Ayris. Face your demons, and the darkness, and your writing will be all the better for it.
The First Five Pages
Essie Fox
The author of gothic Victoriana shines a light into the darkness to reveal the creative choices she made at the beginning of her fifth novel The Fascination
Writing Exercises
Read all about it
Get your your writing group members using old news stories as a creative resource in these exercises from Julie Phillips
Bee aware
Jenny Alexander helps you get the writing buzz in these bee-themed exercises
Get the write idea
Think about how you can build on information and observations in these creative writing exercises to try right now
Creative Writing Workshops
Style and/or SUBSTANCE?
Margaret James looks at the difference between the substance of a story and the style in which it’s told, and the need for writers to consider how the two elements work together
Five quick 5 questions
1. When and where did your journey as
Inside the Industry
Participant observation
Tarja Moles looks at how to embed yourself in a group for research purposes
Behind the tape
Expert advice to get the details right in your crime fiction from serving police officer Lisa Cutts
Book Fair low down
Monica Chakraverty , Cornerstones editorial director of the scouting programme, shares her insider notes on this year’s London Book Fair
Inside the Industry
Industry insight: AI for writers update
Gary Dalkin isn’t making stuff up, but Chat GPT is
SUBMISSIONS: LITMAG
Start with this line ‘As soon as Harriet
Addressing change
Keep up with writing world changes if you want to stay productive, argues Patrick Forsyth
FICTION SUBMISSIONS
Narrative Narrative publishes ‘fiction, poetry, and nonfiction, including
Get lost!
Patrick Forsyth recommends giving yourself time to go off piste on your travels
Pieces of the publishing pie
Some people in the publishing industry end up with a much smaller slice than others – debut authors in particular – and agent Piers Blofeld believes there are conversations about this that vitally need to be held
Writers’ News
Scene on screen
Little White Lies is a London-based website and
NON-FICTION SUBMISSIONS
Wild about nature Original, thought provoking features are
Constructive deconstruction
Dismantle Magazine is a U.S. online title about
POETRY & FICTION COMPETITIONS
Aesthetica Creative Writing Award 2023 Enter poetry and
POETRY COMPETITIONS
The McLellan Poetry Prize 2023 Win £1,000 and
SHORT STORY COMPETITIONS
V.S. Pritchett Short Story Prize 2024 Win a
ANTHOLOGY MARKETS
Atomic Carnival Anthologies The editorial team at Atomic
SUBMISSIONS: AUDIO
Lucky thirteen? Audio podcast of drama/fiction stories Every
NOVEL COMPETITIONS
The Caledonia Novel Award 2024 The annual contest
SMALL PRESS SUBMISSIONS
The Parliament House The Parliament House is a
SUBMISSIONS: INDIE MAGS AND WEBSITES
New Smut Project New Smut Project welcomes sex-positive
SCRIPT SUBMISSION Script to stage
The award-winning Finborough Theatre welcomes unsolicited original full
Nostalgia Short Story Winner
Ravenscar
Dominic Bell is a former oil rig worker
First Line Competition
Let Me Do It
Damien has come to terms with the fact
Under the Covers
Reframe the narrative
Don’t let your writing career be stymied by self-limiting beliefs, says Gillian Harvey, as she looks at author expectation vs reality
Conversa
X
Suporte Pocketmags