http://www.TheCreativePenn.com
Alastair Humphreys is an adventurer, author of 5 books and a motivational speaker. His last book was "There Are Other
Rivers", about walking across southern
India and the deeper side of travel addiction. We discuss travel writing, the
truth of memoir and taking risks to fulfill our dreams. http://www.AlastairHumphreys.com
Alastair's potted travel history includes cycling around the world for 4 years, walking across southern India, rowing the
Atlantic, and walking across the
Empty Quarter desert, amongst many other #microadventures. He makes his living as an adventurer, author and motivational speaker.
Taking action on dreams and getting past inertia. This is what differentiates people who actually end up achieving stuff, rather than talent of any particular type. Al talks about forcing himself to begin, noting that the first step is the hardest to take.
Reading books about travel rather than traveling, or reading books about writing instead of writing.
Al's writing technique is to procrastinate a lot and then finally sit down to write. He doesn't start with the beginning, he starts with whatever comes to mind. Getting the first draft done is the hardest part. In writing travel, you are recounting what has happened so you can follow that flow and re-organize it later in the editing phase.
On editing, especially when there is much repetition in travel experiences. On taking the writing emotionally further by going beyond just what happened and into the deeper side of the adventure. On radical word cutting and making sure the story is interesting to other people. Alastair does actually still do the traditional -- physical -- cut and paste of his manuscript. [I recommend Scrivener!]
On writing
the truth in memoir -- about real people, about what really happened, about raw emotion. Using the truth to tell a better story.
Changing names is always a good idea, but the reality of travel is that there are conflicts and issues, especially when the journey is physically and mentally difficult. That's an important part, but you can still be friends afterwards.
"All the right notes, not necessarily in the right order". There Are Other Rivers is out of synch chronologically and is more about the experience, making it a 'more truthful truth'.
On growth as a writer. Now Alastair has written 5 books, he has moved beyond the basic diary style approach to going deeper into the emotional experience. He took risks with the writing his last book as well as choosing to self-publish. It was a personal expression and he did it his way.
On persistence and discipline. The expeditions are much easier than writing books, which, for Alastair is an excruciating process. He only writes a lot once he has got really annoyed with himself!
Once it starts to take shape, it is more interesting. There Are Other Rivers took several years, after giving it up entirely and then rewriting it in a new way. There's no other solution -- you have to sit at your desk and write. He wrote a lot of it in the middle of the night, sleep-deprived and high on caffeine and then was ruthless around editing.
Advice on writing memoir, and specifically a travel memoir. Make sure you have something worth writing about.
People who want to do travel writing often need to actually do some travel first. Make sure it's a journey you want to do, don't just focus on the end goal. The journey has to come first. I mention
Wild by
Cheryl Strayed as a good example of a travel memoir that goes deeper into the emotional level.
Give a lot of yourself on the page, rather than just recount things that happened. The more honest you can be, the better.
On writing for therapy vs writing for publication. We talk about diaries and then about blogging. Alastair writes a lot of personal thoughts on his blog.
On how blogging is critical for Alastair's business as a professional speaker.
It's a platform that he uses to help people find out who he is, and a way to connect with people and share his experiences. [I also get all my speaking work from my blog.]
On making short films and developing story visually. Alastair takes a lot of (amazing) photos but started using films when it became standard functionality on cameras. He uses films to show the journey and give a personal connection. It is a way to stand out online as making videos is still not mainstream, although millions are now text-blogging. It's all about getting started and learning as you go. It's also about the principle of know, like and trust -- which leads to book sales over time as people get to know you. Editing video is the key to making it excellent -- the latest video of the Empty Quarter is being cut from 26 hours of footage to 30 mins.
Ouch.
- published: 06 May 2013
- views: 1264