Home

There is nothing, absolutely nothing half so much worth doing, as simply messing about in boats.
Kenneth Grahame

 

Travel Writing Competition

 

 

NEW TRAVEL WRITING COMPETITION: THE JUDGES DECIDE

 

The British Guild of Travel Writers has launched a new travel writing competition for unpublished travel writers in partnership with Traveller magazineas part of its 50th anniversary celebrations. Nearly 200 entries were received by the closing date of 31 December 2009. The winners will be announced in February.

The Guild, founded in 1960, is the premier professional association for bona-fide journalists, editors, photographers, and radio and film broadcasters working in the travel field.

"The Guild has supported excellence in travel writing for half a century now and we want to celebrate our special year by championing new travel writing talent," says BGTW Press & PR Co-ordinator Sarah Monaghan. "The winning entry will be a beautifully written piece that is a celebration of a world destination, be it an exotic location or one closer to home."

The competition

The competition invited writers aged over 18 who have not been published [paid work] in the travel field. to submit an 800-word article with the theme: A Very Special Place.

First prize comes courtesy of Travellers' Tales, the training agency for travel writing and travel photography, and the winner will enjoy a four-day travel writing holiday in the intoxicating city of Istanbul, with return flights from airline Pegasus.

You will discover the city while practising your writing skills with a small group of fellow writers under the expert tuition of tutors such as Anthony Sattin, the distinguished Middle East expert, and Jonathan Lorie, former editor of Traveller and founder of the Travellers' Tales Festival (the next one takes place in London on 19-21 February 2010). See www.travellerstales.org

Second prize is a trip to Berlin courtesy of WEXAS, The Traveller's Club, in association with Hotel Berlin and Lufthansa. The prizewinner will enjoy a two-night stay in a double or twin room at the Hotel Berlin on a B&B basis, plus two return economy flights from the UK with Lufthansa.

Third prize is the winner's selection of 10 travel guides from award-winning publisher Bradt - whose guides Michael Palin has described as 'expertly written and longer on local detail than any others'. See www.bradt-travelguides.com.

Prize giving

The winners will be announced in February at a prize ceremony at a leading London hotel, during the launch of the British Guild of Travel Writers' Yearbook 2010 attended by hundreds of the UK's top travel writers, photographers and travel industry representatives. The winning entry will be published in the Spring 2010 issue of Traveller and on the Guild website, www.bgtw.org.

The judges

The competition is being judged by:

  • Sarah Monaghan editor of Gabon Magazine and winner of the British Guild of Travel Writers' Trade and Tourism Award 2007
  • Amy Sohanpaul editor of Traveller and The Traveller's Handbook, and a judge of the prestigious Thomas Cook Travel Book Awards
  • Jonathan Lorie director of Travellers' Tales and the Travellers' Tales Festival, and editor of The Traveller's Handbook
  • Peter Hughes founding editor of ITV's Wish You Were Here? and the British Guild of Travel Writers' Travel Writer of the Year 2008

 

 
Andrew Eames in the Spotlight

Click for full story

What's your earliest memory of travel?
Vomiting in the back seat of the car on the annual family pilgrimage to the Isle of Skye, where my mother comes from. For many years this was our main family holiday, and the car journey from Brighton, where we lived at the time, was a real ordeal in premotorway UK, especially when you're a car-sick kid. Sometimes my grandmother would haul out her purse and my brother and I would take the sleeper train, so excited we could barely...
Read more...

 
     

Login to our site...
(registered users only)

"In 1992 I was invited to join the inaugural flight of Richard Branson's Vintage Airways, an airline operating holiday flights from Orlando to Key West using two restored Douglas DC3 aircraft offering 1940's style service, livery, uniforms and experience—one of their signature moments was the excited announcement from the flight deck that they had just heard on the radio, news of the Japanese surrender in the Pacific. I remember the thing that surprised me most—besides Japan tenaciously holding on for another 50 years—was having to walk steeply uphill to my seat."

Alastair McKenzie, 'What's Changed In 60 years of Civil Aviation?', The Director, Oct 07

 

 

Link to our general newsfeed...

RSS 2.0 button