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Writing for travel guide books is a common way for writer's to get their feet wet in the industry. There are several well-known travel guide book publishers.
Lonely Planet Guide BooksWriters for guide books spend weeks to, more often, months in a location tasting and testing every aspect of a city, a country, a region of the world. Lonely Planet is one of the most popular guide book publishers. It posts information on its Web site, LonelyPlanet.com, for writers looking to take an assignment. Here are the basic requirements:
It’s a bonus if writers also meet these goals:
“All authors who work on our books are freelancers, hired on a contract-by-contract basis. We do not employ staff writers,” says LonelyPlanet.com. Rough Guides Travel BooksThe Work For Us Rough Guides Web page says: “We keep a file of all potential contributors, which we dip into as and when the need arises. Please send us some samples of your writing along with 1,000 words or so on a place you know well, in what you consider to be Rough Guide style. It would also be useful to know of any specific areas you feel most inclined to write about.” The Web site also provides contact information for its London and New York offices. Let’s Go Guide BooksLet’s Go is a student-written guide book sold in 29 countries on five continents. Its pool of writers is comprised entirely of Harvard University students. The books are published by St. Martin’s Press in New York. Bradt Travel GuidesUnited Kingdom-based Bradt Travel Guides accepts proposals from interested writers. There is information on “How to be a Bradt author” at Bradt.com. These are the summarized basics: “Please send us in the first instance your CV, to include any writing and travel experience, together with a brief summary of your proposal(s). Do research first, though. Check our website or catalogue to ensure that we don’t already cover your preferred destination. Look at the competition – if there are already several guides, how could you do better? And if this is a ‘first’, why should it be published? Should we be interested, we will ask you to supply an unedited sample of writing of around 500 words on a destination of your choice.” Bradt also offers this key bit of advice to aspiring travel guide writers: “Forget the glamour. It's poorly paid, time-consuming and very hard work – but it still suits some people.” For those who take on the adventures of travel guide writing and persevere through the low-paying stages, the experience can lead to greater paying writing opportunities in journalism, and to making a living as a freelance writer and as a travel book author.
The copyright of the article Get A Job Writing for Travel Guides in Travel Guides is owned by Adam Williams. Permission to republish Get A Job Writing for Travel Guides in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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