Build Your Story: 8 Strategies for Writing Innovative Setting with Impact
Travel Writing
Whether you do your research from the armchair comfort of
your home or are able to venture into onsite research, consider doing it as if
you are writing a travel piece. (You might consider using portions for blog
spots later as well.) Think of what a tourist might want to know. Immediately
you have a built in interest connection.
For example, in addition to their feature stories, the magazine Via always has at least four smaller
columns that include places to eat, must see locations, bits of history, and
often the unexpected. Their readers expect to see these categories.

Choose a city, type in the name and columnists. Then pick
the largest paper first and scroll through the column categories. Then go back
and pick one of the smaller papers. Compare subject choices.
If you are using a place that is local and familiar, take a
day trip from another perspective. If you usually go with friends or family—go
alone. Or reverse—if you usually visit some place alone next time travel with a
friend or two who have never been there before and see it through their eyes.
Here’s an exercise on finding a travel idea close to home
from L. Peat O’Neil in his book Travel
Writing.

Share: What is the
first thing you look for when you visit any new locale? My children were amazed
that I would always spot the bookstores immediately. : )
Read deep, marcy
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