Updated: 8/24/20 | August 24th, 2020
When I started in the travel industry, one writer came up often in conversation: David Farley. He was a rock-star writer who taught at NYU and Columbia, wrote for AFAR, national Geographic, the new York Times, and numerous other publications. I always wondered who this man was. He was practically mythical. He was never at any events.
But, one day, he turned up and, over the years, we became good friends. His writing suggestions and guidance have helped me immensely, and his outstanding résumé and keen sense of story are why I partnered with him on this website’s travel writing course.
Unlike me, David is a much more conventional magazine/freelance/newspaper writer. He’s not a blogger. En. today I thought interview David about his life as a travel writer.
Nomadic Matt: tell everyone about yourself!
David Farley: A few interesting facts about me: My weight at birth was 8 lbs., 6 oz. I grew up in the Los Angeles suburbs. I was in a rock band in high school; we played late-night gigs at Hollywood clubs, and we weren’t very good. I travel a lot, but I have no interest in counting the number of countries I’ve been to.
I’ve lived in San Francisco, Paris, Prague, Berlin, and Rome, but I currently live in new York City.
How did you get into travel writing?
The typical way: by accident. I was in graduate school and my girlfriend at the time, a writer, proofread one of my 40-page research papers — I think it was on the exciting topic of the house Un-American activities committee in the 1950s — and afterward she said, “You know, don’t take this the wrong way, but your writing was better than I expected.”
She encouraged me to write stuff other than boring history papers. I heeded her call.
One of the first stories that got published was about a pig killing I attended in a village on the Czech-Austrian border. After that, enough of the stories got published, mostly in travel publications, that by default I became a “travel writer.”
I ended up breaking into Condé Nast Traveler, working my way all the way up to the features section, as well as the New York Times. Eventually, I wrote a book that Penguin published. then I expanded my field of interest to food and now I often combine food and travel.
Having done this for about two decades, one thing I’ve learned is that the “expectations of success” is really just a myth in our minds. I always thought, for example, that once I write for the new York Times I’ll have “made it.” then it happened and didn’t really feel like I had done so.
Maybe when I write a feature for a big travel magazine? Nee.
Maybe a book published by one of the most significant publishing houses in the world? Niet echt.
The point is: just keep striving in the direction of success and forget about various plateaus you want to get to. I think it’s a much healthier way to go.
Do you have any favorite experiences/destinations that you’ve been able to write about?
I’d long been wanting to go to Hanoi to investigate, report on, and write about the origins of pho. I finally convinced the new York Times to let me do it in February. It was incredible and delicious.
But then, as we all know, the pandemic chose to swirl its way around the world, and, as a result, many travel stories—including this one—are rotting away on editors’ hard drives for the time being.
I’ve been really lucky to convince editors to let me delve deep into some things that I’m fascinated with and/or love such as spending two weeks hanging out with the men who cremate bodies on the banks of the Ganges River in Varanasi to see what I could learn about life and death.
I got to spend a month volunteering in a refugee camp in Greece and write a dispatch about it.
I went cycling across southern Bosnia with four great pals following a bike trail that was carved out of an erstwhile train track.
I got drunk on vodka with old Ukrainian ladies in their homes in the Exclusion zone in Chernobyl.
And I hiked across a swath of Kenya with my uncle, sister, and brother and law for a good cause: we raised thousands of dollars for an aids orphanage there and also got to spend a few days with the children.
I could go on and on — which is precisely what makes this a gratifying profession.
What are some of the most significant illusions people have about travel writing?
That you can peel off a feature story for a travel magazine just like that [snaps fingers]. It takes so much work for each story to get to the type of experiences we end up writing about — a lot of phone calls and emails to set up interviews and to get your foot in the door some places.
When a magazine is paying you to go to a place so you can come back with an interesting story, you have to do a lot of behind-the-scenes work to guarantee that you’re going to have a good story. It rarely just happens on its own.
Travel stories are essentially a fake or altered reality,filtered through the writer and based on how much reporting she or he did on the spot, as well as her or his past experiences and knowledge about life and the world.
How has the industry changed in recent years? Is it still possible for new writers to break into the industry?
Heel veel. In the last few years, we’ve seen an industry-wide push to be much more inclusive of female and BIPOC writers, which is a great thing. The publishing industry – magazines, newspapers, books – is always ready to accept great, new writers.
The essential is that you, as a writer, need to learn how the industry works first.
So, how do people even go about breaking into the industry?
In the decade or so I taught travel writing at NYU and Columbia University, the students of mine that went on to write for the new York Times, national Geographic, and other publications were not necessarily the most talented in the class; they were the most driven. They really wanted it.
And that made all the difference.
What that implies is they put enough energy into this endeavor to learn how the game is played: how to write a pitch, how to find an editor’s email address, how to improve your writing, learning the nuts and bolts of writing, and expertly knowing the market that’s out there for travel articles (i.e. learning the types of stories that various publications publish).
It seems there are fewer paying publications these days and it’s harder to find work. how does that affect new writers? What can new writers do to stand out?
I realize this is a hard one, but living abroad is really helpful. You end up with so much material for personal essays and you acquire a knowledge of the region that allows you to become something of an authority on the area. It gives you a leg up on other people who are pitching stories about that place.
That said, you don’t have to go far to write about travel. You can write about the place where you live.
After all, people travel there, right? You can write everything from magazine and newspaper travel section pieces to personal essays, all about where you’re currently residing.
How do you think COVID-19 will affect the industry?
There’s no doubt that the pandemic has put a hold on travel writing a bit. people are still writing about travel but it’s mostly been pandemic-related stories. That said, no one knows what the future holds. Which in a perverse way–not just about the travel writing industry but in the bigger picture as well–makes life and reality kind of interesting too.
And while numerous people are losing their jobs and magazines are folding, I have a feeling the industry will bounce back. It just might not be over night. Which is why it’s a ideal time to build up those writing chops. You can also shift your focus for the time being to writing about local places and about other niches (food, tech, lifestyle) based on your know-how and interest.
What can new writers do now to improve their writing?
Lezen. Heel veel. and don’t just read, but read like a writer.
Deconstruct the piece in your mind as you’re reading.
Pay attention to how the writer has structured her or his piece, how they opened it and concluded it and so on. Also, read books on good writing.
This really helped me a lot when I was first starting out.
For many of us, talking to strangers is not easy. Plus, our mothers told us not to do so. but the best travel stories are those that are many reported. So the much more we speak with people, the much more likely other opportunities occur and the much more material you have to work with. It makes the writing of the story so much easier.
Sometimes you’ll be best in the middle of a situation and think: this would make a great opening to my story. My good friend Spud Hilton, former travel editor at the San Francisco Chronicle, says that the dirty secret to good travel writing is that bad experiences make the best stories. This is true, but please don’t put yourself in a bad situation just for your writing. You can write a great piece without having to get your purse stolen or losing your passport.
What books do you suggest new travel writers read?
There are a few books out there on how to be a travel writer, but they’re all embarrassingly abysmal. For me, I write William Zinsser’s “On writing Well” and James B. Stewart’s “Follow the Story” when I was first starting out and they were very helpful.
For a memoir or personal essay, Anne Lamott’s “Bird by Bird” is excellent.
For great travel books, it depends on what your interests are. For history-laden travel, anything by Tony Perrottet and David Grann are incredible; for humor, David Sedaris, A.A. Gill, bill Bryson, and J. Maarten Troost; for just straight-up great writing, Joan Didion, Susan Orlean, and Jan Morris.
I highly recommend reading your way through the series of annual best American travel writing anthologies.
Where do you find inspiration for your articles? Wat motiveert je?
I get my motivation and inspiratiop van onwaarschijnlijke bronnen. Ik denk aan de creatieve meesters en vraag me af hoe ik hun genie kan benutten.
Wat zag de Oostenrijkse schilder Egon Schiele toen hij naar een onderwerp en vervolgens naar het canvas keek?
Hoe bracht Prince een album per jaar uit van 1981 tot 1989, elk een meesterwerk en elk geavanceerd en als niets anders deed iemand anders op dat moment?
Is er een manier om deze creativiteit toe te passen voor het schrijven van reizen?
Ik zeg niet dat ik op gelijke voet sta met deze genieën – verre van ervan – maar als ik op de een of andere manier zelfs een beetje geïnspireerd zou kunnen worden door hun creativiteit, zou ik er beter af zijn.
Meer specifiek voor de artikelen die ik uiteindelijk schrijf, valt veel ervan gewoon in mijn schoot. De sleutel is echter dat het een verhaal is. Een vriend zal terloops een aantal vreemde feiten noemen over een plek in de wereld en het is onze taak om dat feit te nemen en jezelf af te vragen: is er een verhaal daar?
Wat is het meest uitdagende deel van een reisschrijver?
De afwijzing. Je moet er echt aan wennen en gewoon accepteren dat het deel uitmaakt van je leven. Het is heel gemakkelijk om het serieus te nemen en het je naar beneden te laten halen. Ik weet het – ik heb dit gedaan.
Je hoeft het gewoon af te poetsen en te verhuizing, terug op die literaire fiets en blijven proberen totdat iemand eindelijk ja zegt. Weer vasthouden.
Schrijven is een vaartuig. Je hoeft er niet met een natuurlijk talent voor te worden geboren. Je hebt gewoon een sterk verlangen nodig om er beter in te worden. En door het schrijven van lessen te volgen, er boeken over te lezen, erover te praten, enz. Je wordt een betere schrijver.
Als je terug in de tijd zou kunnen gaan en Young David één ding over schrijven zou kunnen vertellen, wat zou dat dan zijn?
Ik zou veel meer lessen hebben gevolgd om allebei te blijven leren – men zou nooit moeten stoppen met leren over schrijven – en mezelf dwingen om te schrijven wanneer ik misschien niet wilde.
Ik denk dat we allemaal van elkaar kunnen leren, en dus het is nuttig om jezelf in dat soort leerzame omgeving te plaatsen. Ik volgde een schrijfles – een cursus non -fictie bij UC Berkeley – en het was erg nuttig.
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Als je je schrijven wilt verbeteren of gewoon wilt beginnen als reisschrijver, instrueren David en ik een zeer uitgebreide en robuuste reiscursus voor reisschrijven. Via videocolleges, aangepaste feedback en voorbeelden van bewerkte en gedeconstrueerde verhalen, krijg je de cursus die David geeft in NYU en Columbia – zonder de prijs van de universiteit.
Bovendien zal David donderdag 27 augustus een volledig gratis webinar doen over reizen schrijven als onderdeel van onze nomadische netwerkreeks van volledig gratis evenementen.
Voor veel meer van David, bekijk zijn boek, een oneerbiedige nieuwsgierigheid of bekijk zijn blog, Trip Out.
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