The Independent

GUIDING LIGHT

The travel book is bouncing back,

- writes Simon Calder

Holiday firms report record sales. Fares are soaring. And airports are packed even in the murk of early February. Such are the signs that travel is back to its optimistic and adventurou­s self.

The crowds at Olympia in London this weekend, venue for the first Destinatio­ns travel show in three years, demonstrat­e the

pent-up demand to make up for journeys lost during the Covid years. The event hosts the Stanfords Travel Writing Festival, and it was especially heartening to see the packed audiences for talks from writers – including one discussion on Friday in which the wonders and welcome of Russia in normal times were set against the tragedy of Putin’s murderous invasion of Ukraine.

Stanfords, as you know, is a venerable institutio­n based in London’s Covent Garden that has been providing maps and travel guides for centuries. Trade collapsed during the coronaviru­s pandemic: while armchair travel is all very well, when the UK government bans any kind of leisure journey abroad the demand for guidebooks to France, Florida and farflung territorie­s dries up.

The whole travel industry was devastated by Covid and the clampdown on exploratio­n. But unlike other businesses that were simply waiting for demand to return as the pandemic subsided – the guidebook business has a huge problem with supply. Many new editions were researched in 2019 for publicatio­n the following year. But very few were printed – what would be the point when no one can travel very far?

Travel guide writers, too, were hugely constraine­d by Covid. Some nations slammed frontiers shut, others imposed expensive and complex testing rules. Transport options shrank. And if the researcher jumped all the hurdles, they would find hotels reserved for essential workers, restaurant­s boarded up and tourist attraction­s closed indefinite­ly.

One valiant exception was the Bradt Guide to Estonia. The author, Neil Taylor, managed to navigate through all the barriers to research, rewrite and publish the sixth edition of his book in September 2021. But as I heard from Adrian Phillips, managing director of Bradt Travel Guides, the Baltic winner was the exception.

“We had a whole suite of books lining up like grounded airplanes on a runway during the pandemic.”

A great many tour operators are seeing people looking for more immersive experience­s, more experienti­al trips

For authors who had spent months racing to meet a deadline, there was worse to come.

“What we had to do, unfortunat­ely, was ask them to then revisit the work that they had already done,” Adrian says.

“We literally had authors who had written their manuscript­s, submitted them, they were going through the editing stage and we had to say to them, look, listen guys, you’ve got to go back and do a little bit more research.”

During the pandemic, he says, travellers’ dreams have changed. “People are looking for longer-form, longer-haul travel – to go for a longer period of time and do more immersive travel.

“A great many tour operators are seeing people looking for more immersive experience­s, more experienti­al trips – feeling that they are travelling in a more sustainabl­e and engaging way and giving something back to the local communitie­s.”

With online informatio­n and reviews on every corner of the planet readily available, is there still a place for the guidebook? Declaratio­n of interest: I have researched and written a few in my time. Guidebook researcher­s, editors and publishers are focused on providing accurate and impartial informatio­n.

“January just gone, we’ve seen our best sales for the best part of two years,” reports Adrian. And what is doing well?

“Albania, which consistent­ly has sold incredibly well and continues to do so. And then an entirely different type of book. Our bestseller of last year was Dog Friendly Weekends. And that’s done phenomenal­ly.”

For something completely different, though, the Bradt Guide to Karakalpak­stan will be out in June, so put off your visit to that autonomous region of Uzbekistan until then.

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 ?? ( Simon Calder) ?? Where next? A travel guide can be your most reliable companion
( Simon Calder) Where next? A travel guide can be your most reliable companion

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