![]() Don’t tell the reader how to feel or what to think. MatadorU’s Dean of Education, Joshua Johnson, rounded up three websites that are full of prompts to get your pen moving again. If you can offer an editor a complete package of writing and photos, you’ll save him/her lots of time. The travel writing, travel photography, and travel filmmaking programs of MatadorU teach you the craft and business of this line of work.Īssignments often go to writers who also have other relevant skills, especially in photography. ![]() ![]() If you want to pursue travel writing as a profession, consider making some investments in your professional development. Don’t make your problems an editor’s problems. The sooner you learn how to handle it and move on, the happier and more successful you’ll be as a travel writer. Prepare yourself for rejection.Įvery writer experiences rejection. Participating in a writers’ group can be even more useful you’ll have a support network of writers who can offer constructive feedback. Writing has some pretty solitary moments, and reviewing your work with a writing partner (especially if you have problems with spelling, grammar, etc.) can be invaluable. Simply telling a good story isn’t enough. Your syntax and word usage should be on point. Spelling and punctuation should be solid if you intend to submit your writing for publication, whether online or in print. Tip #9 notwithstanding, there are some rules that shouldn’t be broken. Don’t be afraid to play with forms or break rules. It’s not narrative that’s inflexible it’s the writer. One of the challenges new travel writers often confront is unlearning rules of narrative they were taught in school: “Always write in the third person.” “Every paragraph must have three to five sentences.” “Every story must have an introductory paragraph, three body paragraphs, and a concluding paragraph.” Learn when to break the writing rules you’ve been taught. ![]() How many hidden gems and best kept secrets can there be in the world, anyway? 9. You can also consult our articles, 10 words and phrases we never want to see in travel writing again and 5 more words we never want to see in travel writing again. If you’re not sure what cliches we’re talking about, you need to go back to step 1 (READ). Not sure how to get started? Check out Matador’s stockpile of blogging tips. And some get nothing more than the recognition that their writing means something to a random reader who stumbled across their blog doing a Google search. Thousands of writers have published their writing primarily or exclusively on their blogs. In the not-so-distant past, a writer had to have a decent portfolio of publication credits to be considered a “travel writer,” and certainly to be published in a glossy mag. Even if some editors don’t see it that way. In a way, all movement and all settling is travel, and so the stories we tell about these experiences are “travel writing” in the broadest sense of the word. Or this blog post by multi-genre writer Elizabeth Eslami, which I’d categorize as “place-based writing.” But travel writing’s more than service pieces.Ĭheck out this genre-busting, long-format narrative by Porter Fox. ![]() “Travel writing” includes hotel reviews and destination guides, published in guidebooks and in glossy travel magazines. ![]()
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