Review: The Traveler’s Atlas of the World

About the book, The Traveler’s Atlas of the World Travelers Atlas of the World

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ National Geographic
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 4, 2025
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 560 pages

The ultimate traveler’s reference, this gorgeous coffee table book features bucket list–worthy travel recommendations for every country in the world.

Featuring beautiful National Geographic photography and 250 illustrated maps, this big and bold volume offers expert advice for must-see sights and hundreds of must-do experiences.

Pack your bags for the ultimate world odyssey! Curated by the world-savvy travel writers and editors of National Geographic, this breathtaking volume features the ultimate experiences in every country of the world, coupled with iconic photography, more than 50 point-of-interest National Geographic maps, and destination overviews highlighting both tried-and-true sights and lesser-known experiences.
Plus, top 10 lists, highlights of cultural treasures, fascinating histories, and recommended itineraries will inspire you to plan your next adventure.

Spin the globe and find:

  • The ultimate flavors of India’s spice hub—and the markets where you can taste them all;
  • Natural beauty worth hiking for, including the Skradinski Buk waterfall in Croatia and El Yunque National Forest in Puerto Rico;
  • Safaris big (the Great Migration in Tanzania) and small (lions on Calauit Island in the Philippines);
  • Tasting tours of the world’s best wine regions from South Africa and France to Germany and Napa Valley;
  • Historical relics, from the Colosseum in Rome to the Maya treasures in Mexico;
  • And so much more!

Covering all seven continents and every country in the world, The Traveler’s Atlas of the World delivers essential information, fun road trips (Germany’s great castles, a journey down the Nile, a road trip through the United States’ national parks), and infinite inspiration through more than 300 spectacular photographs with signature storytelling and invaluable traveler’s secrets.

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About the author: National Geographic NatGeo

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC is one of the world’s leading nonfiction publishers, with an extensive list of titles in categories such as history, travel, nature, photography, space, science, health, biography, and memoir. A portion of its proceeds is used to fund exploration, conservation, and education through ongoing contributions to the work of the National Geographic Society.

My Thoughts  MAB-2025

There’s something about a map you can touch — the faint texture of the paper beneath your fingertips, the promise folded between borders and coastlines. The Traveler’s Atlas of the World brings back that tactile wonder, reminding us that exploration begins long before we board a plane.

This is no dry reference guide. It’s a visual feast — a blend of art and information that invites you to linger. Each page pairs National Geographic’s signature photography with maps that feel alive: textured, colorful, humming with possibility. It’s a book that begs to be spread open on a table, coffee in hand, a finger tracing routes you might someday take — or simply dream about.

What I love most about this atlas is the sense of old-school adventure it rekindles. In an age where GPS tells us exactly where to turn, The Traveler’s Atlas reminds us why we travel at all: to be surprised, to get a little lost, to imagine the world not as data points but as stories waiting to unfold. The digital map can get you there; this one makes you want to go.

It’s a celebration of curiosity — of countries we know by heart and those we might never reach, but can visit here, one breathtaking image at a time.

Goes well with: a cozy armchair, a steaming mug of chai, and an evening spent planning impossible journeys.

 

Review: National Geographic The Photographs: Iconic Images from National Geographic

About the book: National Geographic The Photographs: Iconic Images from National Geographic National Geo- The Photographs

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ National Geographic
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ October 28, 2025
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 464 pages
For tastemakers and citizens of the world, this iconic collection features the best of National Geographic’s world-class imagery across more than 250 cutting-edge photographs.

This glorious, large-format photography collection will immerse animal, science, and nature lovers in the unparalleled legacy of National Geographic’s best-in-class imagery. Featuring fan favorites like the Afghan girl and the sunken prow of the Titanic, as well as gems unearthed from the organization’s celebrated archive, THE PHOTOGRAPHS is for anyone passionate about discovering, protecting, and honoring the wonders of the planet.

In these pages, you’ll find dazzling images from every corner of the globe, including magnificent wildlife and human achievements in science, technology, exploration, archaeology, and adventure. Step into the lives of acclaimed National Geographic photographers like Brian Skerry, Anand Varma, and Jodi Cobb, and read interviews with legends and rising stars like Rob Clark, David Doubilet, Erika Larsen, Camille Seaman, and many more.

Both vivid and timeless, THE PHOTOGRAPHS is a must-have for anyone who loves photography, nature, and the human story.

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About the author

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC is one of the world’s leading nonfiction publishers, with an extensive list of titles in categories such as history, travel, nature, photography, space, science, health, biography, and memoir. A portion of its proceeds is used to fund exploration, conservation, and education through ongoing contributions to the work of the National Geographic Society.

JIMMY CHIN (foreword) is a National Geographic photographer, award-winning film director, renowned mountain climber, and bestselling author. His photography book There and Back became a New York Times bestseller in 2021; his documentary film Free Solo won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Nyad, his first scripted feature, starring Annette Bening and Jodie Foster, was nominated for two Academy awards.


My Thoughts Melissa

Before I ever learned to read, I learned to look. My grandfather kept neat stacks of National Geographic magazines in his den — golden spines lined like treasure, each issue a portal. I remember flipping through the glossy pages, the scent of paper and ink as much a part of the experience as the photos themselves. Faces, creatures, storms, and ruins — the world felt vast and intimate all at once.

The Photographs rekindles that same sense of wonder, distilled into one breathtaking collection. Across more than 250 images, National Geographic’s legendary photographers remind us what it means to see — truly see — our planet and ourselves. There’s the iconic Afghan girl, her gaze as piercing now as it was decades ago. The ghostly prow of the Titanic resting on the ocean floor. And there — a line of surfers, tiny yet fearless, framed against an impossible blue wave. That image, especially, feels like a heartbeat: humanity poised at the edge of nature’s vastness, daring and small all at once.

What makes this volume remarkable isn’t just its scope — though it spans continents and decades — but its restraint. Each image stands almost alone: no essays, no captions beyond a name, a place, a year. That sparseness lets the photography breathe, invites silence, reflection. The book itself is beautifully made, large enough to do justice to its subjects, and designed with reverence rather than spectacle.

For anyone who grew up tracing the edges of the world through National Geographic, this collection is both time capsule and testament. For newcomers, it’s a revelation — proof that the human eye, when paired with patience, empathy, and craft, can still surprise us.

The Photographs isn’t merely a coffee-table book. It’s a reminder that beauty has always been both fragile and ferocious — and that our world, still, is worth looking at closely.

Goes well with: a strong cup of Ethiopian coffee, a lazy Sunday morning, and a window that catches the light just right.

Review: Narrow the Road, by James Wade

 

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About the book, Narrow the Road 04 Cover, Narrow the Road

  • Genre: Southern Fiction, Literary Fiction, Coming of Age
  • Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
  • Pages: 306
  • Publication Date: 26 August 2025

In this gripping coming-of-age odyssey, a young man’s quest to reunite his family takes him on a life-altering journey through the wilds of 1930s East Texas, where both danger and opportunity grow as thick as the pines.

With his father missing and his mother gravely ill, William Carter is struggling to keep his family’s cotton farm afloat in the face of drought and foreclosure. As his options wane, William receives a mysterious letter that claims to know his father’s whereabouts.

Together with his best friend Ollie, a mortician in training, William sets out to find his father and bring him home to set things right. But before the boys can complete their quest, they must navigate the labyrinth of the Big Thicket, some of the country’s most uncharted, untamed land. Along the way they encounter eccentric backwoods characters of every order, running afoul of murderers, bootleggers, and even the legendary Bonnie and Clyde.

But the danger is doubled when the boys agree to take on a medicine show runaway named Lena, eliciting the ire of the show’s leader, the nefarious con man Doctor Downtain. As William, Ollie, and Lena race to uncover the clues and find William’s father, Downtain is closing in on them, readying to make good on his violent reputation. With the clock ticking, William must decide where his loyalties lie and how far he’s willing to go for the people he loves.

Buy, read, and discuss this book:

Amazon | B&N | Publisher | Bookshop | Goodreads


About the author, James Wade James Wade headshot_photo credit Madelinne Grey

James Wade is the award-winning author of Hollow Out the Dark, Beasts of the Earth, All Things Left Wild, and River, Sing Out. He is the youngest novelist to win two Spur Awards from the Western Writers of America, and a recipient of the MPIBA’s prestigious Reading the West Award. His work has appeared in Texas Highways, Writers’ Digest, and numerous additional publications. James lives and writes in the Texas Hill Country with his wife and children.

Connect with James:

Website | Instagram |  NewsletterGoodReads


My Thoughts Melissa

James Wade has a rare knack for writing landscapes that feel lived in—haunted, even. His latest novel, Narrow the Road, doesn’t just take place in Depression-era East Texas; it breathes there. The dirt feels redder, the air heavier, and the people more worn down by life than lifted by it. That’s the first thing that struck me: the place itself isn’t just backdrop—it’s the pulse under the prose.

What’s remarkable about Wade’s evolution as a writer is how he’s learned to make that atmosphere serve the story without ever letting it smother it. His prose is taut but musical, the kind of writing that knows when to linger and when to move. Every sentence seems shaped by the weight of the times—bleak, yes, but never dull, never flat. There’s momentum here, the kind that sneaks up on you. You start reading for the language and suddenly realize you’ve been carried three chapters deep without coming up for air.

This book moves the way real life moves when choices are scarce and hope is a luxury. It’s not a gallop; it’s a steady, purposeful walk into whatever comes next. The characters—men and women alike—live with the kind of quiet desperation that feels heartbreakingly familiar. Wade writes them without judgment, just empathy and precision, as if he’s holding a lantern for them while they figure out whether to run or rest.

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He’s been compared to the great chroniclers of the American undercurrent—Steinbeck, McCarthy, Grubb—but what separates Wade from those heavyweights is his restraint. He doesn’t wallow in the mud or linger on the dust. He gives you just enough—the smell of rain before it breaks, the rough edge of a prayer half-remembered—and trusts you to fill in the rest. That confidence makes the world he builds more immediate, more human.

The result is a novel that hums with tension but never forgets its heart. Wade’s sense of justice and mercy, his understanding of grief and endurance, give the story an emotional ballast that keeps it grounded even in its darkest turns. He’s writing about survival, but also about grace—the tiny kind that hides inside ordinary acts.

Narrow the Road feels like the work of a writer at full command of his gifts. It’s intimate and immense, brutal and quietly hopeful.

Goes well with: black coffee gone cold, a record that crackles between songs, and the sound of wind pushing through pine trees just before the rain.


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