Remember WH Auden’s ‘This
is the Night Mail’ written in 1936 about that expectant train journey set to
the rhyme of the train,(the video is well worth a listen if you are
unfamiliar). Or those wonderful and informative 1960s broadcasts of the
long lost British railways told by the poet John Betjeman, in the way he
only could and of which some can still be enjoyed today on YouTube?
Writers have long been
drawn to the railways and today we read that US operator Amtrak has started to
offer "writers’ residencies" to authors on its long round-trip rides.
It all started when New
York based writer Jessica Gross tweeted that she wished for an
Amtrak-sponsored writing experience and received a response from Amtrak that
they liked the idea. Next thing the round trip to Chicago was arranged and
Gross started to write. Gross travelled for free with Amtrak with them only
asking that she tweeted occasionally while she was travelling and do
an interview for the company's blog at the end of her journey. Since
the news broke Amtrak has been seen an "overwhelming demand" from
writers interested in the program and now is intent on turning this into a
regular operation.
Let us leave the many
questions of cost, who is a writer and how the process will work, for Amtrak to
solve and today just applaud them for thinking outside their box and helping
writers. Perhaps an adventurous publisher may join with Amtrak to help their
writers.
Trains more than any other
form of transport lend themselves to creativity. It may not be possible on
those crowded commuter journeys but is possible on longer quieter ones. Poets
and writers have long been drawn to the rails and initiatives such as this can
leads to another ‘Night Train’ to rival Auden, then it will be a small price to
pay and a journey worth taking.
2 comments:
Post a Comment