Review: Pueblos Mágicos: A Traveler’s Guide to Mexico’s Hidden Treasures by Chuck Burton

About the book, Pueblos Mágicos: A Traveler’s Guide to Mexico’s Hidden Treasures  Pueblos Magicos Cover

  • Pages: 296
  • Publisher: Bayou City Press
  • Publication Date: Oct, 3 2025
  • Categories:  General Mexico Travel Guide

Pueblos Mágicos: A Traveler’s Guide to Mexico’s Hidden Treasures covers 62 of the towns in the Government of Mexico’s “Pueblos Mágicos” initiative, a program that identifies and promotes towns in Mexico that have special cultural or historical significance. Most of these places are small and less well-known than Mexico’s large cities and popular tourist destinations.

Author Chuck Burton, a long-time Mexico traveler and resident, has visited all of these towns. He has chosen 10 towns as his Favorites and awarded Honorable Mention status to an additional 10 towns. For each of those categories, he also writes about “bonus towns,” nearby towns that are also worthy of a visit. Additional chapters divide Mexico’s states into four regions (Northern, North Central, South Central, and Southern), with Pueblos Mágicos towns in each region identified and described.

The book contains maps showing the locations of all 62 towns, a glossary of Spanish/Mexican words, and an extremely useful index. The author opens the book with background information on the practicalities of visiting the Pueblos Mágicos and closes it with additional information, such as travel information on Mexico City and some suggested itineraries for visiting the Pueblos Mágicos. Photos of towns and sites are included, as are a description of the Pueblos Mágicos program and the author’s thoughts on why we travel.

Buy, read, and discuss this book:

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About the author, Chuck Burton Pueblas Magicas Chuck Burton

An old Northern California hippie and charter member of the Love Generation, Chuck Burton has been traveling around the world budget/backpack style for fifty years. His current areas of expertise are Mexico, Southeast Asia and India. Occasionally he has paused his travels to replenish his coffers, primarily as a tax preparer, professional bridge player and teacher, freelance writer and substitute teacher. His greatest joy has been raising his daughter Marisol, adopted in Colombia in 1985 along with his ex-wife. Chuck is fluent in Spanish and currently resides in Mazatlan, Mexico with his longtime companion Kathy Gilman.

Connect with Chuck:

Amazon Author Page | Website


My Thoughts MAB-2025

Early in the introduction to Pueblos Mágicos, Chuck Burton includes a line that immediately caught my attention: “Earn your money where the pay is good, then spend it carefully in warm, cheap countries.” It is pragmatic, a little cheeky, and quietly revealing. That philosophy sets the tone for the book as a whole. This is certainly a beautiful travel guide, but it is also grounded, lived-in, and deeply human. At times, it reads less like a conventional guidebook and more like a thoughtful travel memoir shaped by years of experience.

 

Burton’s familiarity with Mexico informs every chapter. He has personally visited all 62 towns included in the book, and that firsthand knowledge shows in both structure and voice. Ten towns are highlighted as favorites, ten more receive honorable mention, and nearby “bonus towns” expand the scope without overwhelming the reader. The regional organization — Northern, North Central, South Central, and Southern Mexico — makes the book especially useful for travelers who want to plan realistically rather than romantically.

 

This book also corrected one of my long-held assumptions. My parents lived in La Paz, Baja California Sur for twenty years, and during my frequent visits we spent plenty of time in their nearby Pueblo Mágico, Todos Santos. Until reading this book, I believed the designation applied primarily to art colonies, and that Todos Santos received attention mainly because it is home to the famous, or infamous, Hotel California. Burton’s explanation of the Pueblos Mágicos initiative reframes that understanding entirely. These towns are recognized not for trendiness or notoriety, but for cultural continuity, history, and community identity. Seeing Todos Santos placed in a broader national context deepened my appreciation for a place I thought I already knew well.

 

The practical elements of the book are excellent. Clear maps, an extremely useful index, a glossary of Spanish and Mexican terms, and suggested itineraries make this a guide meant to be carried and consulted, not just admired on a shelf. The photographs enhance the text without overwhelming it, while Burton’s closing reflections on why we travel reinforce the book’s thoughtful, unhurried approach.

 

Pueblos Mágicos encourages slower travel and deeper curiosity. It invites readers to look beyond the obvious and to value presence over checklists. This is a guide for travelers who want to understand where they are standing, not simply collect destinations.

 

Goes well with: a well-worn passport, street tacos ordered by the kilo, a cold local beer like Indio or Bohemia, and the slow satisfaction of realizing how much there still is to learn about a place you thought you knew.

Review: No Oil Painting by Genevieve Marenghi

No Oil Painting

 

About the book, No Oil Painting NO OIL PAINTING - Genevieve Marenghi - Burton Mayers Books - Front Cover

A respectable septuagenarian steals a valuable painting and later tries to return it, with a little help from her friends.

Bored National Trust volunteer, Maureen, steals an obscure still life as a giant up-yours to all those who’ve discounted her. The novice fine art thief is rumbled by some fellow room guides, but snitches get stitches, camaraderie wins out and instead of grassing her up, they decide to help.

Often written off as an insipid old fart, Maureen has a darker side, challenging ingrained ideas of how senior citizens should behave. Her new set of friends make her feel alive again. No longer quite so invisible, can this unlikely pensioner gang return the now infamous painting without being caught by the Feds?

I wrote this after hearing a radio interview in which an art detective revealed how a stolen Titian was dumped at a bus stop outside Richmond station. In a red, white and blue plastic bag! I just couldn’t shake such a compelling image. I volunteered at Ham House for many years, and my passion for this Jacobean gem, together with the volunteers’ indomitable spirit, gave birth to my unlikely anti-hero.

With over five million members, the National Trust is a huge British institution. Yet, next to nothing has been written about it in terms of contemporary fiction. Until now.

While No Oil Painting explores themes of insignificance and loneliness in older age, particularly for women, it is mainly intended to entertain and offer a small haven in dark, uncertain times.

Buy, read, and discuss this book:

Amazon USA (Paperback) | Amazon USA (Kindle) | Amazon UK (Paperback) | Amazon UK (Kindle)| Goodreads


About the Author, Genevieve Marenghi Genevieve Daly FINALS

With a BA in English and Philosophy, Genevieve worked for eleven years at the Weekend FT, where she helped create and launch How To Spend It magazine.

She volunteered for years as a National Trust guide at Ham House. This became the setting for her debut art heist novel, No Oil Painting, which was listed for the inaugural Women’s Prize Trust and Curtis Brown Discoveries, and was published by Burton Mayers Books on 10th October 2025.

Her writing uses dark humour to probe the difference between our perception of people and their true selves. The gulf between what is said and what is meant. She considers people watching an essential skill for any writer; overheard snippets of conversation or a bonkers exchange at a bus stop are like gold nuggets. She’s been known to follow people to catch the end of a juicy conversation or argument. Women aged over fifty are essentially invisible anyhow and she views this as a kind of superpower.

Unlike her protagonist Maureen, she hasn’t used this to commit art theft. Yet.

Connect with Genevieve

Instagram | Threads 


Giveaway – UK Residents Only

Giveaway PRize - IMG_3766

Giveaway to Win National Trust chocolate, and a Ham House towel and fridge magnet (Open to UK Only)

*Terms and Conditions –UK entries welcome.  Please enter using the Gleam box below.  The winner will be selected at random via Gleam from all valid entries and will be notified by Twitter and/or email. If no response is received within 7 days then Rachel’s Random Resources reserves the right to select an alternative winner. Open to all entrants aged 18 or over.  Any personal data given as part of the competition entry is used for this purpose only and will not be shared with third parties, with the exception of the winners’ information. This will passed to the giveaway organiser and used only for fulfilment of the prize, after which time Rachel’s Random Resources will delete the data.  I am not responsible for despatch or delivery of the prize.

Enter to Win National Trust chocolate, and a Ham House towel and fridge magnet (Open to UK Only)


My Thoughts MAB-2025

There is something irresistibly delicious about a crime novel that hands the spotlight to someone the world tends to overlook. Genevieve Marenghi’s No Oil Painting introduces Maureen, a septuagenarian National Trust volunteer who has spent a lifetime playing by the rules… right up until she decides not to. A cheeky lunch-table game — the sort of hypothetical mischief people joke about but never act on — becomes the spark that sets her audacious adventure in motion. Before long she is scheming, sweating, and slip-sliding her way through an ill-advised art heist that is equal parts chaos and charm.

 

What makes the novel shine is not the theft itself, although the caper is delightful. It is Maureen’s emotional landscape that lingers. Her great-niece is leaving for New York, her favorite painting is slated for relocation, and the soft, creeping loneliness of late life presses in on her. Rather than succumb, she lunges headfirst into trouble. The heist becomes her rallying cry, a way to shake off invisibility and rediscover purpose. The friends who join her — instead of reporting her — supply the heart of the story, proving that chosen community is sometimes the most life-saving kind.

 

Maureen is funny without being caricatured, vulnerable without being fragile. Her escapade becomes a gentle reminder that senior citizens contain multitudes, that adventure does not expire, and that sometimes the wildest thing you can do is insist on mattering. I found her journey both hilarious and unexpectedly moving, especially as a reader eyeing that demographic from not-too-far away. The whole book reads quickly, but it leaves a warm afterglow long after the final page.

 

It helps that Marenghi’s timing feels almost prescient. With its October 2025 publication date aligning with the very real October 2025 Crown Jewels caper at the Louvre, the novel gains an unintended relevancy. Art theft is having a moment, apparently, and Maureen’s pint-sized rebellion slots right into the cultural conversation.

 

No Oil Painting entertains, uplifts, and subtly encourages the reader to imagine their own cheeky museum caper. Hypothetically, of course. Mostly.

 

Goes well with: a steaming cup of builder’s tea, a shortbread biscuit, and the quiet thrill of plotting an imaginary art heist with your favorite partner in crime.

No Oil Painting Full Tour Banner

Review: 100 Train Journeys of a Lifetime: The World’s Ultimate Rides (100 of a Lifetime) by Everett Potter

Great Train JourneysAbout the book, 100 Train Journeys of a Lifetime: The World’s Ultimate Rides 

Climb aboard the world’s 100 greatest railway adventures with this beautifully curated travel guide from National Geographic.

Filled with unforgettable journeys, including a weeklong excursion through Italy’s wine country and a four-hour sojourn in the Swiss countryside, this illustrated collection will add to your train trip bucket list.

Experience 100 of the most sought-after train rides around the world, from a luxurious trip through the Rocky Mountains to bullet trains that whizz you across Japan.

This is the ultimate collection for railfans, featuring centuries-old railways, modern and speedy engineering marvels, and trips that take you through bustling cities like Chicago or ancient wonders like Machu Picchu.

Along with where and when to go, 100 Train Journeys of a Lifetime includes inside info on passenger cars (like the best cabins to book or the tastiest meals en route), sidebars on historic stations and jet-setting train trips, and top excursions to take while off the rails.
Throughout, National Geographic highlights the top 100 lines that offer a window to the beauty of our world, including:

  • Italy’s Espresso Cadore, a retro sleeper train that whisks you from the ruins of Rome to the ski resort of Cortina in the Dolomites.
  • Norway’s Nordlandsbanen railway, the only train line in the country that takes you to the Arctic Circle for a chance to spot the Northern Lights.
  • South Africa’s Blue Train, which travels 950 miles between Johannesburg and Cape Town.
  • The Ethan Allen Express, a revived route from Manhattan to Burlington, Vermont, along the shores of Lake Champlain.
  • Belmond’s Royal Scotsman, an intimate 40-passenger train (including a spa carriage) that takes you through the heart of the Scottish Highlands.
  • The Grand Canyon Railway, with views of the national park you won’t find anywhere else.
  • The Hiram Bingham Orient-Express, a four-hour ride in a 1920s-style locomotive from Cusco through the Sacred Valley to the Inca Citadel.
  • India’s Palace on Wheels, a week-long sojourn from New Delhi to Jodhpur, Udaipur to Agra.

And so much more!

Buy, read, and discuss this book:

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop | Goodreads


Everett Potter About the author, Everett Potter 

Everett Potter is a columnist for Forbes, a contributor to National Geographic, and an expert for National Geographic Expeditions. The editor of Everett Potter’s Travel Report, he is a former travel columnist for The New York Times Syndicate, Smart Money, Ski, USA Today, and USA Weekend. A longtime contributor to Outside, Money, National Geographic Traveler, and Travel + Leisure, he is the recipient of four Lowell Thomas Awards.

Connect with Everett:

Amazon Author Page | Everett Potter’s Travel Report | Facebook | Instagram 


Melissa My Thoughts

Everett Potter’s 100 Train Journeys of a Lifetime is one of those rare travel books that feels like a ticket drawer full of possibilities. Each page hums with the quiet, anticipatory music of a station platform—steam rising, doors opening, landscapes rolling toward you like a promise. Curated with National Geographic’s signature eye for wonder, it’s part atlas, part armchair adventure, and entirely irresistible.

 

I came to trains early. Childhood afternoons were spent steering HO-scale engines across miniature countryside, learning to dream in rail lines. As a teen, Agatha Christie and Arthur Conan Doyle convinced me that trains held mysteries as well as destinations. By adulthood, the romance of rail travel had lodged itself somewhere deep in my DNA. So opening this book felt less like browsing a travel guide and more like paging through a family album filled with places I’ve loved and places I’ve yet to meet.

 

Potter guides us along railways that span continents and centuries. Luxury sleepers glide through the Rockies as if tracing the spine of a giant; sleek bullet trains whisk across Japan with clockwork precision; a retro Italian night train sweeps you from Rome to the Dolomites in a soft blur of moonlight and motion. I’m especially smitten with sleeper trains, so the Espresso Cadore instantly joined my personal bucket list the moment I read about it.

 

As always with these “of a Lifetime” volumes, the delight is in the detail. Potter’s insider notes point you toward cabins worth claiming, meals worth lingering over, and stations worth exploring. Sidebars shine a lantern on everything from the engineering that powers high-speed marvels to the lore behind beloved routes like the Palace on Wheels or the Hiram Bingham journey to Machu Picchu. The result isn’t just informative; it’s cinematic. You can almost hear the conductor call “All aboard.”

 

And the photography? Pure temptation. Lush, sweeping, beautifully composed images that pair with the text to whisper, buy a ticket right now. Whether you’re daydreaming about Scotland’s misty highlands on the Royal Scotsman or plotting a long weekend aboard the Ethan Allen Express, every spread offers its own small escape.

 

Goes well with: A steaming cup of Darjeeling and a warm, flaky pasty—preferably enjoyed beside a window where the next train might glide past at any moment.