Travel Writing Boot Camp

Course is closed.

DURATION/TIME
8 weeks, Wednesdays 6/2/04-7/21/04: 7-10 p.m.

LEVEL
This class is taught at an Intermediate/ Advanced level. Students must have one year journalism experience, or similar coursework.

LOCATION
SoHo

PRICE
$499 ($475 for )
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Course Details

?We travel, initially, to lose ourselves,? the travel writer Pico Iyer writes. ?And we travel, next, to find ourselves.? Writing about travel takes us even deeper. It?s a way to engage with the world and to build a bridge that brings faraway places home. Great travel writing wakens the senses and stands everything we take for granted on its head. This class is an advanced look at the romance and realities of travel writing. Over the course of eight three-hour sessions, the seminar will consider the various forms of the field, from heavily-reported service pieces to first-person essays from the road. Be warned, though. This is not a course for people looking to score free trips or work their way onto the travel junket circuit. It is a rigorous course that requires a commitment of at least eight hours a week of outside work.

Each week, students will be assigned a travel-related article up to 1,000 words in length. The assignments will be based on prototypes from major travel magazines and the goal is to sell pieces to local, regional and national publications. Travel is a requirement for several assignments. Students will read aloud their completed assignments along with a completed pitch letter. The pieces then will be critiqued by the group and finally by the instructor. Though subject to change, assignments are likely to include a travel-related news item or trend story; a service round-up on hotels or local attractions; a destination piece on a cultural landmark; a day trip within the region; a historical research piece on a neighborhood, local tradition or attraction; an article on the tourism business; and a personal travel essay.

Travel writing is about stepping outside your boundaries, even when you?re in your hometown. Students will be expected to investigate unfamiliar neighborhoods, seek out experts in the field and demonstrate the highest levels of research and reporting. Those who wish to remain in their comfort zone should not consider this class.

In this class, you can expect to learn:

  • How to use where you live to break into the travel market
  • How to grow your career as a travel journalist, no matter what field of journalism you're in now
  • Which sections of travel magazines are easiest to break into and most "freelancer-friendly"
  • How to write perfect pitch letters
  • What to do when you get to your destination
  • How to negotiate your assigning editor to compensate you for travel (eventually!)

By the end of class, students can expect to have:
A complete portfolio of publishable articles (including a travel-related news item or trend story; a service round-up on hotels or local attractions; a destination piece on a cultural landmark; a day trip within the region; a historical research piece on a neighborhood, local tradition or attraction; an article on the tourism business; and a personal travel essay) that will impress any travel magazine editor.

Students who have taken this class have been published in::
Travel + Leisure; The New York Times "Escapes"; The New York Times Magazine; Blue: The Adventure Magazine; Vogue; The Los Angeles Times; The Los Angeles Times "Travel"; The New York Times "Travel"; The Los Angeles Times Magazine, and more.

Admission Requirements
Please submit a letter of interest which includes a brief work history, and a writing sample. The writing sample must not exceed 2,000 words, and does not have to be travel-related.

Instructor Bio

James Sturz's Courses

No courses available at this time.

James Sturz
James Sturz spent three years on staff at Vanity Fair. In addition to his novel Sasso, he has written for more than 70 newspapers and magazines including The New York Times, The New York Times Magazine, International Herald Tribune, The New Republic, The New York Observer, The Boston Globe, Boston Magazine, Travel + Leisure, Conde Nast Traveler, National Geographic Adventure, Scuba Diving, Sport Diver, Islands, Caribbean Travel & Life, Men's Health, Playboy, Detour, Entertainment Weekly, Us Weekly, Glamour, Marie Claire, Redbook, and Saveur. His work has appeared online for SonicNet and Cigar Aficionado. James has also served as a guest editor for the adventure magazine Blue and as a contributing editor for Manhattan File and Lexus magazines. His journalism has also been anthologized in the sociology textbook Human Sexuality. James has appeared on NBC's Inside Edition, CNBC's Real Personal, Sky News's The Book Show, and on Fox's Good Day New York. Pieces he wrote are included in the anthologies Italy: The Best Travel Writing from The New York Times and Best Food Writing 2007.

Testimonials


Although I've worked as a copy editor and researcher for years, I wasn't sure how to properly pitch ideas to editors of other magazines. Thanks to James, I now know the proper way to propose stories. He provided great comments on my articles and gave me the impetus to submit my ideas for publication. -- Kathleen Kent, freelance publicist

"I have been writing for several years, but after taking James' class I felt that I could take my writing to the next level and pitch to bigger publications. Since completing the class I have landed travel pieces in The New York Times, Out Traveler, Flaunt, Clear, and Genre and logoonline.com. -- Cator Sparks

"James is a great instructor, mainly because of the things he doesn't do?he doesn't hold your hand, he doesn't tell you everything you do is good, he doesn't have any corny, touchy-feely advice on writing; he's just a smart, well-spoken guy who knows what he's talking about and can answer your questions. This was by far the best class of its kind that I've taken. " -- St. John Frizell, copy director, Bon Appetit

"I had just read about the seminar. On instinct, I grabbed a last-minute flight from Portland, Maine, so I could attend. I'd do it again in a heartbeat. His teaching style, like his writing, is unpretentious and dramatically effective. What a rare gift! In one fell swoop, James clinched the aspects of the business that I thought I knew, and opened my eyes to all that I did not know. Thanks to the way James filled in the nooks and crannies, pitching perfect proposals to major magazines no longer seems like a daunting, haphazard gamble. I'm eternally grateful." -- Pat Friedman

"James Sturz is fantastic. He pulls no punches and holds no hands. He lets you know when you've got something and when you don't. He teaches a course for the writer driven to break into travel writing, not for the dilettante looking to explore a new style. If you want to become a travel writer, consider this course your first journey." -- Ethan Todras-Whitehill, freelance writer and web designer

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