The Telegram (St. John's)

Want to become a travel writer?

- BY PAULINE FROMMER Pauline Frommer is the Editorial Director for the Frommer Travel Guides and Frommers. com. She co-hosts the radio program The Travel Show with her father, Arthur Frommer and is the author of the best-selling Frommer’s Easyguide to New Y

Over the course of the year, I give about a dozen speeches on travel across North America. Inevitably, when I’m signing books afterward, a familiar scenario will play out. I’ll hand back the book I’ve just scrawled my name on and notice that the individual standing in front of me looks very, very nervous ...and doesn’t want to move away from the table. He or she will chitchat for a few minutes before taking a deep breath and blurting out “How can I become a travel writer?”

Of course, there’s no one path to this type of career change. But I do have advice, which I share, and it boils down to this: One of the best first steps is attending the Book Passage Travel Writer’s and Photograph­ers Conference, which is held each August in Corte Madera, California (right outside of San Francisco).

I know, I know - there’s a lot of gatherings for travel writers/ bloggers. But I think Book Passage is the best for beginning travel writers for three key reasons:

A focus on craft: Unlike other travel-writer conference­s, where networking is the key activity, attendees come to Book Passage to master basic and advanced writing and photograph­y techniques. Each morning they attend a three-hour long seminar, studying for three days in a row with one teacher or a team of two teachers, and covering such topics as travel memoirs, newspaper and/or magazine writing, or creating one’s own brand through blogging. It is terrifical­ly hands-on experience, with the students creating their own short pieces, reading work aloud and learning how to better edit their own work. In the afternoons and evenings, there are lectures and panels that cover different genres of travel writing and photograph­y, as well as sessions on the business side of the equation.

All-star Teachers: And I realize that I’m going to sound like quite the braggart with that claim, as I have taught at Book Passage over the years, and will be doing so again this summer. But I don’t refer to myself: I’m in awe of my fellow faculty, who have included novelist Isabelle Allende, the New Yorker’s Susan Orleans and Pico Ayer. This year’s staff includes movie-starturned-travel-writer Andrew Mccarthy (who was named Travel Journalist of the Year a few years ago by the Society of American Travel Writers), Tim Cahill (one of the founders of Outside Magazine), Catharine Hamm (travel editor of the Los Angeles Times), and Don George (founder of the conference and an editor-at-large for National Geographic Traveler). Not only are these folks, and others on the faculty all whip smart, they’re unusually kind and generous. They’d have to be, as the entire faculty donates their services for free, honored to be part of this event.

Intimacy: Unlike TBEX and the Society of American Travel Writers yearly conference, which are held in the types of places that house convention­s, Book Passage is held in a small bookstore. There’s room for no more than 200 students at the conference, and all but one of the meals are held on the store’s veranda, and shared between teachers and students. That means that, even though the conference isn’t focused on networking, some great networking can be done. I’ve hired authors here, and several of the conference’s faculty are alumni who got their first jobs here.

The Book Passage Travel Writers and Photograph­ers conference will take place Aug. 9-12. Go to www.bookpassag­e.com for info on price, housing options, the detailed schedule and more.

“Unlike TBEX and the Society of American Travel Writers yearly conference, which are held in the types of places that house convention­s, Book Passage is held in a small bookstore. There’s room for no more than 200 students at the conference, and all but one of the meals are held on the store’s veranda, and shared between teachers and students. “

 ?? LMARIE7B.WORDPRESS.COM ?? Students and teachers dine together in the courtyard of Book Passage.
LMARIE7B.WORDPRESS.COM Students and teachers dine together in the courtyard of Book Passage.

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