Saturday, October 5, 2024
Uncategorized

Write in Italy With Writer’s Digest

Florence holds a special place in my heart, though not for any one particular reason. Rather, it’s a sense of homecoming I’ve felt, even from the first time I stepped into the city. There’s something about the way the sun reflects off the painted yellow buildings or brown stones and terra cotta roofs that creates a golden hue. The sky seems a more brilliant blue than I’m used to and every corner you turn hints at another discovery waiting to be made.

I’m not the first, nor will I be the last, to feel such a strong affinity for the Renaissance city. It’s a place where writers have found inspiration for centuries, from poets like Dante Alighieri, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, and Robert Browning, to novelists like E.M. Forster, Maggie O’Farrell, and Sarah Winman, to nonfiction writers like Mary McCarthy, Kamin Mohammadi, Emiko Davies, and Robert M. Edsel. The list goes on.

Florence is never far from my mind and for as much as I love traveling to Florence solo (and to answer the unspoken question: I’ve never felt safer), on recent trips, I’ve discovered how much I also enjoy introducing others to this place. So, when I was asked if I could put together a writer’s retreat in Europe, I handed over an itinerary for this trip the next day. After all, I’ve essentially been planning it in my head for more than a decade based on my own travels.


Writer’s Digest Writing Retreat to Florence & Tuscany, September 26-October 3, 2024. Click the image to learn more.

Writer’s Digest

In Florence, each stop we’ll make has some essential literary or creative connection, whether it be paintings or sculptures depicting myths or legends, writers’ homes, or statues that are so full of life that essays and stories have been written about them. Additionally, we’re lucky enough that we’ll be in Florence during one of their traditional parades celebrating the first Chianti of the new season. Florentine parades are an experience you don’t want to miss.

During my trips to Florence and Tuscany, I’ve always packed my days full of museums and vineyards and olive tasting experiences, or day trips to surrounding towns. Each afternoon I’d find a café for an aperitivo, making time to journal about my day. But I never did leave quite enough writing time. I always promised myself I’d write more based on what I saw when I got home. But life gets in the way. Which is why, for this retreat, in addition to our days in Florence, we’ll physically retreat to the countryside outside the hill town of San Gimignano.


Le Terre Rosse, our writing villa.

Le Terre Rosse

We’ll be staying at an idyllic villa where we’ll have dedicated writing time. Time to develop stories based on the truly glorious (and sometimes truly bizarre) paintings. Time to craft personal essays about your experiences. Time to adapt what you’ve seen into that historical novel you’ve been planning, no matter where it’s set. Time to poem about walking the same streets as Michelangelo and Donatello. It’s the writing time needed after filling your mind with so much wonder.

I can’t wait to share my favorite parts of Florence with you and write together this fall.

Learn more about the itinerary, hotels, and sights here.