April 23, 2007

How I got my travel-writing career started

For the past seven years, I've been asking my various travel writer interview subjects how they got started writing. Frank Bures recently asked me that same question for a travel-writing class he's teaching, and this is what I told him:

My writing aspirations can be traced back to about age 13, when I started writing horror stories in the style of Stephen King. This horror-writing phase didn't last long, but it helped winnow the creative urge, and familiarize me with the basics of putting a prose narrative together. Later I became involved with my high school newspaper, and I wrote a humor column for my campus newspaper in college. After college, I traveled the United States for eight months, living out of a VW van. Fancying myself a kind of new Jack Kerouac, I tried to write a book about this travel experience, but that ultimately failed when I couldn't interest any agents or editors. Out of money and not sure what to do next, I went to Korea to teach English for a couple years.

In Korea, I learned how to live within another culture, and I became a more seasoned, instinctive traveler. I also learned from the shortcomings of my failed USA travel book, and sharpened my writing, keeping in mind the narrative needs of my readers. During my second year in Korea, I rewrote one of my USA book chapters (about Las Vegas) and sold it to Salon.com's travel section. Encouraged by this small success, I strengthened my relationship with my Salon editor by writing some travel stories about Korea. He published about five of them.

At this point, I'd saved a lot of money from teaching, and I'd planned on traveling through Asia and Europe for over a year. Since I had an editorial contact at Salon, I decided to pitch him with a travel column idea. He wasn't sure about this idea at first, so I hit the road on my trip and continued to write stories. It just so happened that Leonardo DiCaprio was shooting the travel-oriented movie "The Beach" in Thailand, so I decided to try and sneak onto the set of the movie as an experiment about the motivations and idiosyncrasies of travel. My attempt to sneak onto the movie set failed, but the resulting story, "Storming 'The Beach'", made the cover of Salon and landed in the 2000 edition of The Best American Travel Writing. I got the travel column at Salon, and that turned out to be a big turning point in my career, as it raised my exposure one-hundred-fold. Editors of glossy magazines like Condé Nast Traveler invited me to write for them, and I've been freelancing for various travel venues -- National Geographic Traveler, Outside, Slate, Islands, the San Francisco Chronicle, etc. -- ever since. My book, Vagabonding, came out in 2003. I've also maintained an author website since 1998, and a blog since 2002, and both have been good for promoting and showcasing my work.

These days, travel is still the core of my work, though I occasionally write literary criticism, interviews, and other types of writing. I'd say travel writing is 80% of what I do.


Posted by Rolf Potts |
Related: Rolf's News and Updates, Travel Advice

Comments (6)

Phil:

Thanks for the tips, Rolf. Have you written any newspaper articles? If so, how is the approach to a newspaper travel feature different from writing a magazine article?

Phil

Hi there sir!
I'm glad I came across your site today. At least I got a good idea now what to do with my travelling blog although it's not much. Feel free to comment on it if you have free time passing tru it. Just started on it, so not much to read. sigh. Enjoyed reading your blog. =)
thanx~

Craig Tansley:

My God! You wrote the Beach story when you were still so relatively inexperienced!! That story was far and away the best one in the 2000 Best Travel Writing Series - it was unbelievable! I've lost count of the number of times I've read the thing, it's inspired me a billion times in my own travel writing... that's freakish!

For anyone interested in travel-writing, http://www.writtenroad.com is full of good links like Vagabonding. For those who are interested in doing it long-term, or are interested in the grittier, business-side of travelwriting, one of the best places I've found is, funnily enough, http://www.travelwriters.com
Look at their newbies section, it'll answer all your questions and help you hone what you're looking to do. Advice is typically given by people like Rolf who've got extensive experience.

Rolf:

Cheers, Craig! Glad you enjoyed that story. It was indeed one of my earlier published travel pieces -- though I had been writing seriously for quite some time before then (I was just waiting for the right break, which came with Salon).

Phil, newspaper writing tends to be more service-oriented and destination-oriented than magazine writing (though magazines are skewing toward service these days as well). Study some of your favorite travel mags and newspaper travel sections to see the format, then try to write to that format. For spec articles, newspapers are probably the best way to break in. For magazines, try the shorter news and service pieces at the front of the magazine if you want to break in. Good luck!

Eunbyul:

Thank you very much for sharing your experience. I'm an aspiring travel journalist too and I see now that it's normal to face difficult obstacles in the beginning.

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