Bestselling travel writer connects with readers at home

Sophy Roberts, who lives near Bridport, will be hosting a talk during Sherborne Travel Writing Festival
- Published
For bestselling author Sophy Roberts, the Sherborne Travel Writing Festival will be a chance to connect.
The first few lines of her latest book, A Training School for Elephants, describe the landscape of her Dorset home.
But as the travel writer admits, "for all its beauty and all the people I love that live here, I have a very restless spirit".
This spirit has taken her across the globe, as a journalist and author, and she is now preparing to share it with readers.

Sophy says being able to hold an event about her work closer to home means a lot to her
It's the third year Sherborne Travel Writing Festival has been held in the town, hosting award-winning writers in talks for more than 200 guests.
The event means a lot for Sophy, who has decades of experience in the industry.
"Just because my work takes me far away doesn't mean I'm not without my anchors in community, that's why I like this festival," she explains.
"I find the audience is so engaged, passionate, curious. It makes you feel good about this shared curiosity for what lives beyond our very pretty Dorset."
Sophy says it is also important to her as it is an opportunity for her loved ones to gain some insight into her life.
She continued: "For them to be able to be in the room, in a talk that immerses them in the life I have been pursuing for five years, it means a lot to me."

Sophy's latest book, A Training School for Elephants, will be the focus of her talk on Saturday
Authors speaking at this year's festival, which runs until Sunday, include Ann Morgan, Barnaby Rogerson, Kapka Kassabova, Xiaolu Guo, Jonathan Lorie, Alexander Christie-Miller, Mevan Babakar and Horatio Clare.
Sophy, who will be talking at the festival at 19:00 BST, said the prize is "exciting recognition for the genre", acknowledging the cost of travel writing.
"[It] is really high, one way of doing it through a book advance but that money runs out really quickly."

Sophy has partly funded her travel writing career through freelance writing for other publications
Despite the expenses sometimes associated with travel, Sophy feels it is an exciting and "challenging" time.
"It's really important to question a genre that's colonial in its bones. What's happening now is a very exciting recalibration of that privilege, with new and diverse voices.
"Understanding places we're not from, cultures we don't belong to, politics we don't understand - whatever it might be - this is a space where those connections occur through the written word."
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