Stephen Marriott
New Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Camino Frances in June/July 2012
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As much as I love reading camino stories, and am passionate about the camino, some of the books I've read are becoming exceedingly boring!
After reviewing 4 new camino books in 8 months, I'd like to appeal to potential writers to find a new approach or a different focus to their story to avoid the formulaic, almost write-by-numbers style of camino story.
You know the kind I mean - "I felt called to walk the camino; I climbed over a mountain and got blisters/shin splints/tendonitis; slept in a room with 100 snoring strangers; got up early; packed, walked, arrived, washed, ate, slept - ditto, ditto, ditto, blah,blah, blah - met amazing people; arrived in Santiago, cried in the mass and now I am a changed person - Amen. The End."
Remember, thousands upon thousands of pilgrims walk the same landscape, through the same towns, face similar challenges, learn similar lessons and experience the same highs and lows, and many, like you, now have an urge to hit the keyboard and turn their journal into a book.
Find an original theme. Not everyone can walk with a donkey, or lead a blind person, or walk in the dead of winter, but there has to be new, fresh slant to a camino story for the book to have any appeal.
And please, get your spelling right and be consistent (you can't have hosteleria, hospitaleria, hospitalero etc) And, check your geography. You can't meet up with old friends you first met in Triacastela when you arrive in el Acebo!
Last year we visited a book shop in Pamplona. The owner told us that over 400 new camino stories had been published between June 2008 and June 2009. The market is becoming saturated and unless you self-publish, you will need to have something original to say to persuade a publisher to add your book to the many hundreds out there.
As much as I love reading camino stories, and am passionate about the camino, some of the books I've read are becoming exceedingly boring!
After reviewing 4 new camino books in 8 months, I'd like to appeal to potential writers to find a new approach or a different focus to their story to avoid the formulaic, almost write-by-numbers style of camino story.
You know the kind I mean - "I felt called to walk the camino; I climbed over a mountain and got blisters/shin splints/tendonitis; slept in a room with 100 snoring strangers; got up early; packed, walked, arrived, washed, ate, slept - ditto, ditto, ditto, blah,blah, blah - met amazing people; arrived in Santiago, cried in the mass and now I am a changed person - Amen. The End."
Remember, thousands upon thousands of pilgrims walk the same landscape, through the same towns, face similar challenges, learn similar lessons and experience the same highs and lows, and many, like you, now have an urge to hit the keyboard and turn their journal into a book.
Find an original theme. Not everyone can walk with a donkey, or lead a blind person, or walk in the dead of winter, but there has to be new, fresh slant to a camino story for the book to have any appeal.
And please, get your spelling right and be consistent (you can't have hosteleria, hospitaleria, hospitalero etc) And, check your geography. You can't meet up with old friends you first met in Triacastela when you arrive in el Acebo!
Last year we visited a book shop in Pamplona. The owner told us that over 400 new camino stories had been published between June 2008 and June 2009. The market is becoming saturated and unless you self-publish, you will need to have something original to say to persuade a publisher to add your book to the many hundreds out there.
Can you please share the titles of these books ....I, for one, would be interested in learning whether or not I have read them as well or, if I think that they may be worth a look....Have just read 3 woeful Camino books. Will not be spending money on any more- only guide books in the future.
Can you please tell me the title and where can I buy it....I hope davidum if you read mine you won't find it boring.....
Yes a camino is a walk for hundreds of thousands but each step we take is a private journey.
My journey was a tribute for my dad my words a memory of a great man.
I was lucky... A publisher approached me & now it's selling in 34 shops .... I've had fantastic comments from as far as Russia to cork about my book ....But even if no one read it I have a book that my new grandchild will someday read about his 'great-papa'
Buen camino
I’ve just finished reading ‘Two Steps Forward’. I read the whole lot mostly because it reminded me of my teenage years when I read everything I could lay my hands on. It is just like an old school Mills and Boon or maybe a Georgette Heyer. I had to read to the end to get to the happy ending! Contrived is the word that comes to mind but it was about two routes that I would like to walk, the Le Puy and the Norte.Well, one of the writers is on this forum so won't disclose the name of the book. The other two were: "Two Steps Forward" - supposedly a comedy about two people walking from Cluny. It is fictional and woeful.
"Boots to Bliss" - about walking from Vezelay. It is supposed to be non fiction, but in my opinion is more like fiction!
All three were by Australian authors.
The why is a bit like the walk. It certainly isn't for the money or to just talk, but to share a story hopefully well told.
I'm in the middle of reading Sinning Across Spain. The Attachment sounded interesting. I wish it were available as an e-book (or in a local shop so I wouldn't have to pay to have it shipped halfway around the world).I also love reading books about the Camino. However, I like them to be well written and factual. The last three that I read all had fanciful writing by the authors. One had large print and few pages. My friend bought this book online and didn't realise what a waste of money it was.
A very good book that I recently read is, "The Attachment", by Ailsa Piper. Not a true Camino book but came about because of the Camino. She also wrote the book,"Sinning across Spain".
I may have something for you! I just finished my first book called "It's Your Camino." Now comes the fun part in publishing it. However, this is a book that combines a love of Spain and its enigmatic history with a humbling insight into the pilgrimage and the pilgrims who told their story. I think you will be touched.As much as I love reading camino stories, and am passionate about the camino, some of the books I've read are becoming exceedingly boring!
After reviewing 4 new camino books in 8 months, I'd like to appeal to potential writers to find a new approach or a different focus to their story to avoid the formulaic, almost write-by-numbers style of camino story.
You know the kind I mean - "I felt called to walk the camino; I climbed over a mountain and got blisters/shin splints/tendonitis; slept in a room with 100 snoring strangers; got up early; packed, walked, arrived, washed, ate, slept - ditto, ditto, ditto, blah,blah, blah - met amazing people; arrived in Santiago, cried in the mass and now I am a changed person - Amen. The End."
Remember, thousands upon thousands of pilgrims walk the same landscape, through the same towns, face similar challenges, learn similar lessons and experience the same highs and lows, and many, like you, now have an urge to hit the keyboard and turn their journal into a book.
Find an original theme. Not everyone can walk with a donkey, or lead a blind person, or walk in the dead of winter, but there has to be new, fresh slant to a camino story for the book to have any appeal.
And please, get your spelling right and be consistent (you can't have hosteleria, hospitaleria, hospitalero etc) And, check your geography. You can't meet up with old friends you first met in Triacastela when you arrive in el Acebo!
Last year we visited a book shop in Pamplona. The owner told us that over 400 new camino stories had been published between June 2008 and June 2009. The market is becoming saturated and unless you self-publish, you will need to have something original to say to persuade a publisher to add your book to the many hundreds out there.
I buy from Wordery or Book Depository..postage is "free" but buggers now add GST...prices are usually very good..better than Amazon.au (Amazon.uk won't send to Oz anymore)We have the same problem, unfortunately, buying books from overseas. Makes them very expensive.
Hope you are enjoying"Sinning Across Spain".
The hackneyed phrase "it's your camino" has alsway perplexed me as it it gives the impression that you can do want you want without regard to those around you...a sentiment heartily embraced by those setting of alarms at ungodly hours,the plastic bag rustler etc..I'm sure theyMy wife, Rory, and I hiked the Camino last May from the Basque Village of Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port to Santiago de Compostela (Spain) in 31 days. I just finished my first book called "It's Your Camino." Now comes the fun part in publishing it. However, this is a book that combines a love of Spain and its enigmatic history with a humbling insight into the pilgrimage and the pilgrims who told us their stories. Not to mention a pep talk from Martin Sheen before we left. I think the reader will be deeply touched by what (and who) is waiting for them on this road. Buen Camino.
Ken
Good point and yes, I can relate to the examples. However, I was thinking along the lines of "there's no one way to do the Camino...that it's personal....if you're there to lose weight or forget a relationship, and if you want to do it in 30 days or 300 days, by foot or taxi or a combination thereof...stop and visit a museum or break a land speed record....well...and there I go again, it's your camino.The hackneyed phrase "it's your camino" has alsway perplexed me as it it gives the impression that you can do want you want without regard to those around you...a sentiment heartily embraced by those setting of alarms at ungodly hours,the plastic bag rustler etc..I'm sure they
would justify such selfish actions by "it's my camino".
My family constantly taunts me when I post a glorious cup of Café Cortado home to them, when doing the /a Camino, ...coffee in front of a glorious sunset, coffee in a beautiful street with croissant, coffee with my hat and sticks etc...
They say that I probably one day will write a book on "Glorious coffees I met along the Way " !
Now I will never write that book !!
I've read quite a few camino books but they're a bit like looking at someone's holiday snaps. I think if you havent been it's best to have everything new and surprising and if you have been why read someone elses camino?
The only books I could find in 2000 when I was researching the Camino were Paulo Coelho's 'Pilgrimage' and Shirley MacLaine's newly published "The Camino". They nearly put me off walking the Camino altogether!
I was not planning on going in search of some metaphorical sword and I didn't relish the idea of a mystical- master putting me through my yoga paces at night (Coelho), nor did I cherish the idea of giving birth to a non-androgynous being in a place called Lemuria (Maclaine).
I blame these books for the subsequent frequent walks I did on the Camino. Because of these books, in an effort to avoid the rats and other creatures they encountered, I avoided every place that was described as 'basic, no beds, no running water and no electricity' and went in search of more up-market places to stay. This meant that I sometimes had to walk 40km a day (but at least I escaped the rats!)
A year after my return from the Camino I was asked by the newly established Confraternity of St James of South Africa to hold a workshop for wanna-be pilgrims at our home. Of the 12 people who came, 4 had done the Camino Frances and were there to share their experiences. When they started waxing lyrical about the atmospheric, traditional refugios (that's what they were called in then) that offered blessings by candlelight and communal meals, I thought I must've walked on a different continent. Nobody cooked me a meal in 27 nights.
By avoiding all the perceived rat-infested shelters, I had missed out on what was described by Conrad Rudolph in his book "Pilgrimage to the End of the World" as the 'soul of the Camino'. So two years later I packed the backpack and headed off to find the elusive 'soul' of the Camino. It didn't happen. I chose to walk from Paris to Spain - a rather sterile, no auberges, no pilgrims, lots of road walking experience. At every subsequent workshop ex-peregrinos oohed and aahed nostalgically over the 'soul' albergues on the Camino.
In 2007 two friends and I walked the Camino Frances again. I posted a request on this forum for a top ten albergue list - not the most modern but the most atmospheric and traditional with 'soul'. Armed with this list we trekked across the Camino staying at places like Eunate (with a candlelight blessing in the church), Granon (hand-clapping communal meal), Tosantos (serenaded by the wonderful Jose Luis), San Bol (with the wonderful Rastafarian hippies) San Nicolas (no foot washing there that night), Bercianos (watching the sunset before dinner), Manjarin (best communal meal by candlelight ever!) Ave Fenix (reiki healing by dear Jesus Jato), La Faba (with the vegetarian hippie Marcel) and San Xulian (woken up by classic music).
That was my year of ensoulment! I was a born-again pilgrim!
This post.As much as I love reading camino stories, and am passionate about the camino, some of the books I've read are becoming exceedingly boring!
After reviewing 4 new camino books in 8 months, I'd like to appeal to potential writers to find a new approach or a different focus to their story to avoid the formulaic, almost write-by-numbers style of camino story.
You know the kind I mean - "I felt called to walk the camino; I climbed over a mountain and got blisters/shin splints/tendonitis; slept in a room with 100 snoring strangers; got up early; packed, walked, arrived, washed, ate, slept - ditto, ditto, ditto, blah,blah, blah - met amazing people; arrived in Santiago, cried in the mass and now I am a changed person - Amen. The End."
Remember, thousands upon thousands of pilgrims walk the same landscape, through the same towns, face similar challenges, learn similar lessons and experience the same highs and lows, and many, like you, now have an urge to hit the keyboard and turn their journal into a book.
I would like to add that I think everyone has a story and that they should write it, especially for their children and grandchildren but even there they must be consistent in their spellings, how they write numbers, the geography, the tense, and so on.This post.
It's definitely worth reading.
Bumping it, because a lot of people may not take the trouble to go back to look at it.
If you can stand to read one more, I invite you to try Camino Sunrise...I have enjoyed several books about the Camino and made every effort to make my theme sincere and yet different than most. Regardless, I appreciate your post. It is a good reminder.As much as I love reading camino stories, and am passionate about the camino, some of the books I've read are becoming exceedingly boring!
After reviewing 4 new camino books in 8 months, I'd like to appeal to potential writers to find a new approach or a different focus to their story to avoid the formulaic, almost write-by-numbers style of camino story.
You know the kind I mean - "I felt called to walk the camino; I climbed over a mountain and got blisters/shin splints/tendonitis; slept in a room with 100 snoring strangers; got up early; packed, walked, arrived, washed, ate, slept - ditto, ditto, ditto, blah,blah, blah - met amazing people; arrived in Santiago, cried in the mass and now I am a changed person - Amen. The End."
Remember, thousands upon thousands of pilgrims walk the same landscape, through the same towns, face similar challenges, learn similar lessons and experience the same highs and lows, and many, like you, now have an urge to hit the keyboard and turn their journal into a book.
Find an original theme. Not everyone can walk with a donkey, or lead a blind person, or walk in the dead of winter, but there has to be new, fresh slant to a camino story for the book to have any appeal.
And please, get your spelling right and be consistent (you can't have hosteleria, hospitaleria, hospitalero etc) And, check your geography. You can't meet up with old friends you first met in Triacastela when you arrive in el Acebo!
Last year we visited a book shop in Pamplona. The owner told us that over 400 new camino stories had been published between June 2008 and June 2009. The market is becoming saturated and unless you self-publish, you will need to have something original to say to persuade a publisher to add your book to the many hundreds out there.
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