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
Simon Whaley
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.’