Budget Travel seeking writers for 10th anniversary issue

If you’ve ever wanted to be a travel writer, there’s never been a better chance than right now.

One of our favorite magazines here at Gadling, Budget Travel, is dedicating their entire 10th anniversary issue (June 2008) to reader submissions. Even the cover photo will be selected from amateur photo hounds (that would be you if you’ve ever submitted a photograph to our Gadling Flickr Pool! Make us proud!)

The editors have created a number of different categories and ideas which will be open for reader submissions. Some of them are list oriented, such as 25 Reasons You Love New York, while others are more detailed essays; Has a Trip Changed Your Life?

If you collect specific souvenirs when you travel, there is a category for you, or if you have ever wanted to review a guidebook then Budget Travel is looking for your thoughts. Even those who do nothing but shop are welcome to submit for the chance to spend $100 of Budget Travel’s money in a “fascinating locale.” All you have to do is tell the editors what you bought.

What a great idea! I’ve never heard of a magazine turning an entire issue over to its readers. For a category like budget travel, however, it makes sense; deals on the road come and go quickly and a volunteer army of travelers is the best way to dig up the very best and the most current.

David Sedaris’s Travel Stories

Friday night on a whim, I headed to the Palace Theatre in Columbus to see David Sedaris. Since he was here last year, I hadn’t planned to go, but changed my mind. This year, as I laughed those kind of laughs that start to hurt after awhile, huge chortles and the gawfaws–along with everyone else in the audience, I thought about how much his stories capture the aspects of travel that I love. The absurdities one finds oneself in, either because of a lack of understanding of culture or getting the language wrong. When humor shows up, that’s the best.

Last year, he read an essay about his experience in a doctor’s waiting room in France where he ended up in his underwear while everyone else was clothed. Last night, he read an essay that wove together details about pretension, ineptness and fluency when it comes to speaking a foreign language and trying to capture or butcher accents. The story moved back and forth between talking about a college professor who said Nicaragua in an overly accenty way and a friend who visited him in Paris and insisted on speaking in French even though the friend, Sedaris and the friend’s wife were all American and the wife didn’t speak French. As Sedaris read this story, it was with such gusto and flair I wanted to share it with everyone. Alas, he said that it’s not going to be on This American Life, the NPR show that he wrote it for after all. Since Sedaris is on a several city tour, perhaps if you live near one of them, you’ll have a chance to catch him.

One of the things I adore about David Sedaris, besides his writing and how he reads his work, is his generosity of spirit. The Palace Theatre was packed and he stayed after to sign books and take time to visit with each person who handed one over for a signature. What I noticed during last year’s and this year’s book signing is his knack for making each person feel like a friend, and it seems like he means it. This year, like last year, we talked about TJs Restaurant, an establishment known for dishes like the Barnyard Blaster. When I reminded him of this, he said that he always asks people where they’d go to eat after a night on the town. He also said he’d been trying to remember the name of the restaurant all day.

For your reading pleasure, here is the essay about the French waiting room. It was published in The New Yorker, September 2006. And here’s David Sedaris on NPR’s Morning Edition in 1998 reading his essay, “A New Yorker in France.”

Jack Keroauc’s On the Road Turns 50

“What is that feeling when you’re driving away from people and they recede on the plain till you see their specks dispersing?- it’s the too-huge world vaulting us, and it’s goodbye. But we lean forward to the next crazy venture beneath the skies.” Part 2, Chapter 8, page 156 (From Web site Book Rags: Quotes from Jack Keroauc’s On the Road.)

Isn’t this just a perfect sentiment about what travel feels like sometimes? When I think of travel, Jack Keroauc comes to mind. Yesterday I came across articles about this being the 50th anniversary of the year On the Road was published. Growing up with that traveler gene, I missed out on this book, but carried its title with me in my head until I read it sometime after my Peace Corps days. Still, Keroauc paved the way for those of us with a passion for travel, pondering and writing about those experiences, hopefully touching on what is the soul of those we meet along the way–and ourselves.

If you want to brush up on Keroauc, here is a link to an NPR show about him. There are some terrific photos, anecdotes and audio tapes of him reading from his work. Here’s another link to the New York Times Arts Beat section where people are currently leaving comments about the book’s lessons. This is what tipped me off about the anniversary. There were 154 comments last I checked.