Suche books:   





Travel Writer's Guide
Gordon Burgett

Communication Unlimited, 2002 - 272 pages

average customer review:based on 7 reviews
view larger image
 for more information click here

   highly recommended  highly recommended





So You Want To Become A Travel Writer?

Searching the Internet in trying to find out about travel writing, I came across several bulletin boards where one of the main questions posed was how does one become a travel writer?
After all, there seems to be a certain amount of glamour attached to travel writing. Imagine earning money and having a great time traveling!

Well folks, it is not as simple as it may appear, and when you read Gordon Burgett's 3rd edition of Travel Writers Guide; Earn Three Times Your Travel Costs By Becoming a Published Travel Writer, you will appreciate that it requires a great deal of hard work and planning in order to write and sell travel articles.
Nonetheless, travel writing may be the impetus in helping you travel to places you always dreamed and thought about, but were lacking in that one important commodity-money.

Although, as the author states, "the writing and selling process described in this book is primarily directed at newer writers eager to learn the steps to follow so they can travel, write about it, and sell that writing often and profitable," veteran travel writers will also pick up a few pointers that they may have overlooked.

Burgett is the author of over 1700 published articles and 23 books. He knows the ins and outs of travel writing, and as he mentions in the introduction, "the book is a show-and-tell. The basic text, the how-to element, is the "tell," and the "show" comes from his many examples."

The book divides itself into five sections: overview of travel writing, before the trip, during the trip, after the trip, and related information.
The key theme throughout the book is to recognize that travel writing is a profession and as such you must think and act at all times like a professional. Consequently, you must be completely organized before, during and after the trip if you want to be taken seriously.
Burgett provides tips on how to get organized, writing plans and sales schedules, query letters, photos, taxes and legal matters.
You are also provided with excellent advice on interviewing, destinations to check out, analyzing articles written by other writers, and improving writing and editing skills.

However, writing an excellent article is not sufficient if you wish to succeed. You must also know how to sell your articles before and after you decide to travel to a particular destination.
Burgett makes the point that you are also a businessperson, and as such you must learn marketing and selling skills. Ample suggestions are provided as to how you can master these skills, and as the author affirms, once they are mastered, you will find that the more you sell the easier it becomes.

An added and unique feature of the book is the 365 travel article ideas that are listed at the end. Some of these ideas you probably would never had thought about, however, they do provide fodder for some interesting articles. As an example, how about the topic of exit fees, is there a way to avoid them? Another, how does one find English-speaking doctors and dentists when traveling outside of the USA?

No doubt, the book is an excellent investment for all aspiring travel writers, and a reference text that should find a prominent place on a travel writer's bookshelf.

The above review first appeared on the reviewer's own site:


 for more information click here


Hmm...was keen to buy this but have a question...

I was keen to buy this book, and was about to until I read a review that basically said "Burgett is the author of over 1700 published articles and 23 books. He knows the ins and outs of travel writing". The review clearly seemed to have taken this information from the book itself.

However, I checked this by doing a search on Amazon for this author, and all the results returned were of the "How to..." variety.....How to be a travel writer, how to make money freelance writing, how to make money selling seminars, even how to make money organizing a scavenger hunt (wtf?), etc...

I've never heard of Burgett before, hence the reason I checked...initially I searched to see if he was a successful travel writer (had his books been popular? Amazons star ratings would hopefully reveal that)...after all why buy a book on how to be a successful travel writer if the author himself was only a mediocre writer? But the results make me suspicious of the author having been a travel writer at all...Now I don't know what to do...anybody able to vouch for the authors credentials or shed light on this?


 for more information click here









 for more information click here


Money-saving/money-making advice for any literate traveler

Now in an significantly updated and expanded third edition, Travel Writer's Guide by world traveler and author Gordon Burgett is a straightforward "how-to" manual for paying for one's own vacations or even making a living simply by writing magazine and newspaper articles while traveling either at home or abroad. From planning a safe and profitable trip, to taxes and the law, to writing an effective query letter to magazines, to advice for converting a single idea into a multitude of articles, to the utilization of photos in composing travel articles, to tips for conducting interviews and selling copy, Travel Writer's Guide is a first-rate compendium filled from cover to cover with practical ideas and money-saving/money-making advice for any literate traveler who could use a little extra financial recompensation to underwrite their journeys by becoming a published travel writer.


 for more information click here






Travel Writer's Guide, 3rd Ed.

This is by far the best travel writing book I've read. It's meaty, chock-full of practical advice from what to do when to how to sell and resell articles. Very strong on how to organize, write and submit work and how to do it profitably. The 365 travel article ideas, examples of query letters, and info on tax write-offs and comps are a plus. I was surprised to find practically everything I needed to write successfully all in one book.


NOT an easy hobby--but PROBABLY a good profession

Before reading this, I fancied myself as someone who might get into travel writing to make a few thousand extra dollars a year. After reading this book, I said, "That's WAY too much work for the money" and the realization was, quite accurately I think, that travel writing is a PROFESSION. Professions take full time attention to be successful and a lot of time (years really) to build up the knowledge, contacts, and writing style to make a living. I'm just not willing to put in the 40 hrs per week on it.

The book is very prescriptive, giving detailed instructions on what to do "x" many months before departure, who to contact, where to find them, what to say, how to say it, how many pictures of what kind to take and send, how to do your background research etc. I created project management spreadsheets (because I am a dork) based on the recipe in the book. When I got done I realized how incredibly much work it required. I do not doubt at all that if you followed this prescription you would be a successful travel writer, but it's not something you can dabble in and do well unless you have unusually remarkable connections.

If you have already dedicated your heart to being a travel writer, ABSOLUTELY buy this book and follow the advice. If you were looking to dabble, like I was, you may want to pass.

Not because the book isn't well written; its style is accessible, very helpful and made me really excited about traveling and writing again. As a compromise, I just started a travel blog. No money in it, but no pressure or research required either so I can focus on enjoying the writing part.


 for more information click here


reviews: page 1, 2



"Any good writer can earn three times back what it costs them to travel; on the other hand, nobody can really teach another person how to write," says Gordon Burgett. "Yet an experienced journalist can explain what must appear on the page to see print almost every time and to earn its writer a healthy, reliable income. It's all a matter of meeting an editor's need, and that process is predictable. Particularly so in the case in travel writing."

Twice before Gordon wrote the Travel Writer's Guide, and both times it sold widely and was a Writer's Digest Book Club top choice.

But things are different in 2002 from 1997. Computers are the rule rather than the exception, queries letters are as often e-mailed or faxed as sent by regular mail, and digital photography is on the verge of becoming the standard. Still, most of the same old needs prevail: tight prose, sharp insights, replicable how-to guidelines, and fresh perspectives. So Gordon markedly revised the second edition to include the new while keeping the best of the old.

What is different about Burgett's writing? There are other, good travel writing books around (as he acknowledges in his bibliography) but none with the same hands-on, step-by-step thoroughness learned through his writing and selling 1,700 articles (most in travel) to the major magazines and newspapers in the U.S. and abroad.

Nor is there a book with the same writer-to-reader immediacy that Burgett gains some 40 times a year when he offers his much-sought, four-hour "Writing Travel Articles That Sell!" seminar nationwide. So what one reads in the Travel Writer's Guide is what Burgett does, publishes, and talks about.

And nobody else shares as much of the fun of traveling, writing about it, and selling it!

(The appendix also may be worth the price of the book itself: 365 ideas for travel trips!)

So Gordon is back talking about querying, trip planning, market selection, topic prioritization, logistics, how magazines differ from newspapers, income taxes, documentation, keeping fun in the trip plan, cameras and photo submission, how to sell the same article many times? the same old stuff and more, from a brand new perspective.

"It's hard to beat the travel writer's trifecta: a fun trip, getting paid to tell (and show) others about it, and deducting the expenses on your 1040. My book lets others join in by doing the whole process from the outset," says Burgett.


 for more information click here



hot or not?    What's your opinion?     Write a review and share your thoughts!



recommendations

Ultimate Travel Writers Reference Guide
Discovering Naples and Southern Italy
Best Writer Resources and Tools
My fav's for freelance writing
Jobs for travel Buffs




travel

Travel Pictures
Do Travel Writers Go to Hell?: A Swashbuckling Tale of High ...
The Travels of a T-Shirt in the Global Economy: An Economist Examines ...
The Travel Book: A Journey Through Every Country in the World
Best Travel Activity Book Ever (Backseat Books)



guide

Kaplan GRE Exam 2009 Premier Program (w/ CD-ROM) (Kaplan Gre Exam ...
StrengthsFinder 2.0: A New and Upgraded Edition of the Online Test ...
The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment
The Official Guide for GMAT Review, 11th Edition
Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association



search for books
travel writer's, guide, travel, writer


Impressum / about us


Suche books: