It is not necessary, however, to go so far afield to obtain personal experiences, as is shown by the following newspaper and magazine articles based on what the writers found in the course of their everyday pursuits.
The results obtained from cultivating a quarter-acre lot in the residence district of a city of 100,000 population were told by a writer in the Country Gentleman.
A woman’s experience with bees was related in Good Housekeeping under the title, “What I Did with Bees.”
Experience in screening a large porch on his house furnished a writer with the necessary information for a practical story in Popular Mechanics.
Some tests that he made on the power of automobiles gave a young engineer the suggestion for an article on the term “horse power” as applied to motor-cars; the article was published in the Illustrated World.
“Building a Business on Confidence” was the title of a personal experience article published in System.
The evils of tenant farming, as illustrated by the experiences of a farmer’s wife in moving during the very early spring, were vividly depicted in an article in Farm and Fireside.
The diary of an automobile trip from Chicago to Buffalo was embodied in an article by a woman writer, which she sold to the Woman’s Home Companion.
Both usual and unusual means employed to earn their college expenses have served as subjects for many special articles written by undergraduates and graduates.
Innumerable articles of the “how-to-do-something” type are accepted every year from inexperienced writers by publications that print such useful information. Results of experiments in solving various problems of household management are so constantly in demand by women’s magazines and women’s departments in newspapers, that housewives who like to write find a ready market for articles based on their own experience.
CONFESSION ARTICLES. One particular type of personal experience article that enjoys great popularity is the so-called “confession story.” Told in the first person, often anonymously, a well-written confession article is one of the most effective forms in which to present facts and experiences.
Personal experiences of others, as well as the writer’s own, may be given in confession form if the writer is able to secure sufficiently detailed information from some one else to make the story probable.
A few examples will illustrate the kind of subjects that have been presented successfully in the confession form.
Some criticisms of a typical college and of college life were given anonymously in the Outlook under the title, “The Confessions of an Undergraduate.”
“The Story of a Summer Hotel Waitress,” published in the Independent, and characterized by the editor as “a frank exposure of real life below stairs in the average summer hotel,” told how a student in a normal school tried to earn her school expenses by serving as a waitress during the summer vacation.