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27th April 2021

A Q&A with Lottie Gross, the 2020 Travel 蜜桃视频 Award Young Travel Writer of the Year

A human tower in Catalonia.

A Q&A with Lottie Gross, the 2020 Travel 蜜桃视频 Award Young Travel Writer of the Year

We spoke to Lottie Gross, who was the 2020 Travel 蜜桃视频 Award Young Travel Writer of the Year. If you’d like to enter your work in this category 鈥 or any of the other 21 categories 鈥 it’s easy and free to聽. Entry closes on 7 May so don’t delay!

What does it mean to you to win this award?

Winning Young Travel Writer of the Year 2020 was a huge surprise 鈥 a delightful one at that! The competition was so incredibly stiff and I was completely convinced it was going to go to one of my nominated peers. I feel very fortunate to have had some amazing adventures that could translate into award-winning articles. I鈥檓 also hugely grateful to my editors at The Telegraph for the commissions and their expert edits on my stories 鈥 they played a big part in this. Winning this in the middle of a pandemic 鈥 and just before I become 鈥渢oo old鈥 to enter 鈥 has been a real confidence boost.

How did you first get into travel writing?

I knew I wanted to be a travel writer from my time at university. I interned at places like APL 蜜桃视频 and managed to get some accidental work experience on the Rough Guide to Kenya when I was still studying. I saw a brand new role come up on the web team at Rough Guides so applied for that after university and managed to snag the position out of 500-odd other people! I worked my way up at Rough Guides for a few years, then moved onto Love Inc before going freelance.

How have you coped with the challenges of being a travel writer unable to travel during the Covid-19 crisis?

To say it has been hard is an understatement. I lost all my work back in March/April 2020 and it was a huge blow to my confidence and self worth. I decided I needed to diversify a little, so began writing features for The Telegraph on my experience as a vaccine trial volunteer, and I penned some op-eds and a few random non-travel features for the paper.

I鈥檝e managed to keep a toe in travel, though, and took the opportunity to revisit old trips and pitch stories I鈥檝e been sitting on for ages. The Telegraph Travel鈥檚 digital team has kept me busy reporting from London Heathrow, and they鈥檝e even let me write op-eds about how much I dislike Grant Shapps, so it hasn鈥檛 been all bad. As soon as travel was allowed last year I hit the road again, and will keep doing so as and when it becomes safe.

What makes a destination a great place to write about?

For me, it鈥檚 always the people. Telling human stories 鈥 whether current or historical; individual or collective 鈥 is my passion, and so it鈥檚 the people who live in a place that make it interesting to write about. That鈥檚 why I鈥檝e long championed destinations like Derby, Birmingham and Hull. They鈥檙e great destinations in their own right, but it鈥檚 the people who make an impression on you.

Do you think travel writing is going to change when we can travel again?

I hope so! There has been a lot of navel-gazing over the last 12 months while we鈥檝e all been grounded, and lots of us have unearthed desires for change within the travel industry. While I鈥檓 sceptical that travel habits will actually change, I do hope travel media finds more ways to encourage it, and more of a spotlight will be shone on sustainability 鈥 not just environmental, but societal sustainability, too.

What destinations are on your travel wish list for the future?

I鈥檓 likely going to be grounded in Britain for a while longer yet, as I鈥檓 about to embark on a rather chunky project focusing on England, Scotland and Wales. But once I can get abroad again I am desperate to find my way to Catalunya in Spain to hang out with the human towers teams again, and I鈥檝e still got flight vouchers for a trip to Savannah, Charleston and St Pete/Clearwater that need using up, so I expect the US will be on my radar once travel there is safe.

Tell us about your Talking Travel Writing newsletter.

The newsletter had been percolating in the back of my mind long before the pandemic, but the bizarre nature of last summer accelerated the idea and brought it into fruition. It felt like it was the right time to launch a publication that would help travel writers, and those outside the industry, to keep up with and excel at this job. It was such a difficult time, it felt like we needed a proper community more than ever, and now I have almost 2,000 writers receiving the emails every month.聽The newsletter is all about demystifying travel media 鈥 which can often be a bit of a closed-book and cliquey place sometimes. We cover all sorts, from the ethics of travel writing to the actual craft of writing good copy on destinations, and we offer advice, tips and pitch call-outs to help writers 鈥 aspiring or experienced 鈥 keep getting those commissions.

If you鈥檇 like to enter your work for this year鈥檚 Travel 蜜桃视频 Awards, it鈥檚 straightforward and quick 鈥 visit the聽聽to see a full list of categories and more information on how to enter.