Travel Writer and Essayist

Thomas Swick

20 articles 2006–2017

Thomas Swick is a travel writer and author known for his literary approach to travel journalism. He contributed essays and reviews to The Weekly Standard from 2006 to 2017, exploring themes of travel, place, and cultural discovery. He formerly served as travel editor of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

Pilgrim's Progress

July 14, 2017 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

In the first sentence of the first essay in this collection, Geoff Dyer confesses that on his way to French Polynesia to write about Gauguin he somehow lost his copy of David Sweetman’s biography of the artist. As travel writer failings go, it pales in comparison to Karl Ove Knausgaard's arriving…

Down Argentine Way

January 29, 2016 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

The old droll definition of an Argentine—an Italian who speaks Spanish, lives in a French house, and thinks he's an English gentleman—does not appear anywhere in Buenos Aires: The Biography of a City. James Gardner's history of the Argentine capital is a serious work that, inevitably, brings that…

All Booked Up

August 24, 2015 · book reviews, Thomas Swick, Magazine

All writers begin as readers, and the majority, the ones worth reading, continue life as more prolific readers than writers—especially, it seems, as they age. “In my seventh decade I feel a new haste,” Larry McMurtry wrote in Walter Benjamin at the Dairy Queen (1999), “not to write, but to read.”…

Too Much Sunshine

March 10, 2014 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

It is occasionally noted that Florida has replaced California as the legitimate home of the nation’s nuts, but what is left unmentioned is that Floridians, unlike Californians, embrace the title—sort of the way England cherishes its eccentrics, though they are generally a more lovable group. 

The Gateway City

December 30, 2013 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

Oh, the writers! They came to Tangier in boatloads, getting—many of them—their first taste of Africa and Islam. Though over time, the great allure of Tangier for writers became other writers. 

Down the Boot

August 12, 2013 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

Tim Parks has followed in that predominantly British literary tradition of making another country one’s home and then making that home one’s principal subject. Gerald Brenan chose Spain; Lawrence Durrell and Patrick Leigh Fermor shared Greece; William Dalrymple has claimed India. For the last three…

Road to Rome

March 19, 2012 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

There are roads that are as storied as rivers, though the reasons for their notoriety are much more varied. The Silk Road (which was really a collection of roads) stands forever as a conduit, of goods and ideas, between East and West. The Tokaido lives on, in the prints of Hiroshige, as a pastoral…

Getting There

July 25, 2011 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

Wanderlust

Poets of Mobility

July 4, 2011 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

Last year I gave a reading in New York City, and talking to people afterwards I was struck by how many were also travel writers, or at least survivors of a travel-writing course. It was refreshing to be around literate travelers. At home in Florida I usually address seniors, who like to ask me…

Thinking Lunar

March 14, 2011 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

Nocturne

Laughter in Red

October 26, 2009 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

Hammer and Tickle

No Fly Zone

July 20, 2009 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

Right now millions of Americans are thinking: staycation.

Uprooted Man

April 13, 2009 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

My Two Polish Grandfathers

Pilgrims' Progress

September 8, 2008 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

"Location, location, location," as everyone knows, is the appropriately redundant rule of contemporary travel writing. It's proven in every bookstore, where titles on Italy and France sometimes outnumber those on the rest of the world combined.

Have Book, Will Travel

February 26, 2007 · Thomas Swick, Magazine, Books and Arts

Travel writers, regularly dismissed as trivialists, rarely indulge in the popular book tour whine. It's not just that we have bigger trips to fry, we have fewer bones to pick. We don't see what novelists find so objectionable about a diet of fine hotels, especially when the rooms all come reserved…