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21 Sentences With "travel piece"

How to use travel piece in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "travel piece" and check conjugation/comparative form for "travel piece". Mastering all the usages of "travel piece" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I loosely plan my travel, just as Geoffrey Morrison advises in this great travel piece.
If you're looking for a more everyday travel piece, check outHorizn Studios' "Pale Rose" luggage collection.
In other words, it was the travel piece carried to its logical and not very interesting conclusion.
Inside you'll find new fiction by renowned author Joyce Carol Oates alongside a travel piece about Berlin's all-female fight club.
Finally, a Travel piece on how to spend 36 hours in Thailand's Golden Triangle recommended visiting an elephant camp, to the disappointment of one reader.
The managing editor, A. M. Rosenthal, was already apoplectic about the travel piece, Ms. Tifft and Mr. Jones wrote, and may not have needed much persuasion to impose a ban.
In jacket form, it's definitely not as tough-edged and substantial a topper as your go-to moto, but it certainly delivers on the practicality front (and makes for a brilliant travel piece).
A travel piece on island life, which appeared in Harper's Bazaar in 1947, is a meditation on the vanished conviviality suffered by a small community in Maine when it sacrificed too much to prosperity.
Seth Kugel (21.20-250): I wrote my first Travel piece for the Times around when Matt did, and soon ended up with a column called Weekend in New York; I was the travel writer who didn't travel.
Reader Idea In the spirit of National Poetry Month, this Reader Idea illustrates one teacher's delight in words — whether found in a New York Times travel piece on the making of haggis, in the verse of Robert Burns, or in the Modern Scots language his students use themselves.
Tell a Terrifying Tale "Everyone has a ghost story, or at least that's how it has always seemed to me," begins this Travel piece, "Getting in the Spirit," about how a writer ended up listening for suspicious sounds in the middle of the night at the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum in Weston, W.Va. Do you have a ghost story?
Instead of featuring much-documented vistas like Yosemite or the Grand Canyon, for example, the exhibit instead focuses on a selection of parks you may not have traveled to yet (or may never see), including the Kenai Fjords in Alaska, Hawaiian volcanoes, New Mexico's Carlsbad Caverns, Utah's Bryce Canyon, and Florida's Dry Tortugas – the latter which was reviewed this month in a New York Times travel piece which called it an "under the radar" national park.
The table of contents includes the following: A quartet of short stories by Alberto Moravia; a symposium on creativity with contributions from Truman Capote, Lawrence Durrell, James T. Farrell, Allen Ginsberg, Le Roi Jones, Arthur Miller, Henry Miller, Norman Podhoretz, Georges Simenon, Isaac Bashevis Singer, William Styron and John Updike; humor pieces from Jean Shepherd and Robert Morley; an article on pacifism in America by Norman Thomas; a piece on how machines will change our lives by Arthur C. Clarke; an essay on "the overheated image" by Marshall McLuhan; contributions from Eric Hoffer and Alan Watts; an article in defense of academic irresponsibility by Leslie Fiedler; a memoir of Hemingway by his son Patrick; Eldridge Cleaver interviewed by Nat Hentoff; a travel piece by the espionage novelist Len Deighton; and the first English translation of a poem by Goethe.
His travel piece, A Stranger in My Native Land, was published in Written Forever: The Best Of Civil Lines.
Hemispheres was established in 1992. Its editorial coverage includes its signature ‘3 Perfect Days’ travel piece, and the latest news in business, travel, fashion, and culture. The magazine reaches a highly influential business and leisure traveller audience, with a median household income of $128,000, spending and profession. In 2009, Ink was appointed as the new publisher for United Hemispheres.
The Portland store achieved a certain amount of television fame when it was featured as "The Knot Store" in an episode of the second season of the popular IFC television series Portlandia, created by Fred Armisen and Carrie Brownstein, guest starring Jeff Goldblum. Later, Armisen included Paxton Gate Portland in a travel piece he authored for the UK-based Guardian Newspaper in May 2013.
After graduating, with a journalism degree, from Rhodes University in South Africa, he was a city reporter for a Johannesburg newspaper, and completed freelance editing assignments for Radio 702 and other media outlets. After moving to London in 1994, he published several feature pieces in newspapers such as The Independent. His first travel piece was published by the Sunday Telegraph in 1997. He has also written extensively for the Daily Telegraph, The Guardian, and Travel + Leisure.
In 1999, Valdes left Boston for a position as staff writer in the Calendar section of the Los Angeles Times. Her articles have appeared in dozens of newspapers, and she has written cover stories for Glamour and Redbook. Valdes continues to work in journalism, writing a weekly parenting column for the website "Mamiverse", an opinion piece for NBC Latino, a travel piece for London newspaper The Guardian, and contributing posts for The Huffington Post Books section.
After the hanging of Van Tuong Nguyen, a Vietnamese-Australian from Melbourne, on 2 December 2005, Sister Susan Chia, province leader of the Good Shepherd Sisters in Singapore, declared that "The death penalty is cruel, inhumane and it violates the right to life." Chia and several other nuns comforted Nguyen's mother two weeks before his execution for heroin trafficking. Singapore's death penalty laws have drawn comments in the media. For example, science fiction author William Gibson, while a journalist, wrote a travel piece on Singapore that he sarcastically titled "Disneyland with the Death Penalty".
In January 2016, he was chosen as a recipient of a Premio Ostana "Special Prize" for Mother Tongue Literature (Il Premio Ostana Internazionale Scritture in Lingua Madre 2016), a prize given to any individual who has done writing and notable advocacy for the defence of an indigenous language. The prize ceremony was held from 2 to 5 June 2016, in the town of Ostana (Cuneo, Italy). Tubosun was the first African to be so honoured by the organisation. In October 2015, he was nominated for the CNN African Journalists Award for his travel piece Abeokuta's Living History, first published at KTravula.com.
In February 2009, a Village Voice music blogger accused the newspaper of using "chintzy, ad-hominem allegations" in an article on British Tamil music artist M.I.A. concerning her activism against the Sinhala-Tamil conflict in Sri Lanka. M.I.A. criticized the paper in January 2010 after a travel piece rated post-conflict Sri Lanka the "#1 place to go in 2010". In June 2010, The New York Times Magazine published a correction on its cover article of M.I.A., acknowledging that the interview conducted by current W editor and then-Times Magazine contributor Lynn Hirschberg contained a recontextualization of two quotes. In response to the piece, M.I.A. broadcast Hirschberg's phone number and secret audio recordings from the interview via her Twitter and website.

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