Last week I had the pleasure of spending a few days in New York City and doing all the touristy things.

God, I love NYC. Like Juliet, Sophie, and Barbara I found inspiration in travel. NYC — aka Gotham — a place where filth and beauty sleep side-by-side, and every language in the world can be heard marveling at breathtakingly (and breathtakingly crass) Times Square.

Where else do you see mighty obelisks of chrome and steel . . .
. . . hiding a middle-America icon.

Crass monuments to American consumerism (don’t ever take a kid into the M&M store unless you want to spend big on bad chocolate):

And breathtaking wonders (looking up at the Swarovski chandelier in lobby of 30 Rock):

NYC at night pulses and seethes (Times Square at 44th and Broadway):

It’s no less impressive during the day (looking up at Empire State Building):

We didn’t go to the top of either 30 Rock or the Empire State Building. Why pay $30/head (and wait in line for two hours) when the sights on the streets are far more impressive? Besides, my last visit to the top of a monster NYC icon was the Observation Deck of the Twin Towers a few months before 9/11. I’m going to keep that as my gold standard of views.

My notebook is filled with vignettes and character sketches of the people I encountered in NYC. As a writer, discovering unique characters to avoid cliches is a godsend, and I found a whole novel’s worth of characters in one picnic lunch at Bryant Park (I recommend Chipotle on 42nd St. across from the NYC Library for a cheap and tasty takeout).

The other benefit to travel is the delight of filling up the brainpan with new information that can sift down into your writing. It’s exciting to be able to access those moments and know they are wholly unique to you and your work.

Photos by Sophie Bolton

Kathleen Bolton is co-founder of Writer Unboxed. She has written two novels under the pseudonym Cassidy Calloway: Confessions of a First Daughter, and Secrets of a First Daughter--both books in a YA series about the misadventures of the U.S. President's teen-aged daughter, published by HarperCollins.
Kathleen Bolton
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