Bookish Travels: November 2025 Travels

I saw this meme on It’s All About Books and decided to do it once a month. Many thanks to Yvonne for initially posting this!!

This post is exactly what it says: the places I travel to in books each month.

Enjoy my travels, and please let me know if you have read these books.


Countries I visited the most: United States

States/Provinces I visited the most: South Carolina

Cities I visited the most: Columbia


United States

Minnesota (Lilydale, Minneapolis), Florida (Siesta Key)
New York (Rivertown, Hollowville)
South Carolina (Spartanburg), Arizona (Millport)
South Carolina (Columbia), Tennessee (Nashville), West Virginia

England

London, Surrey

Ireland

Dublin, Ballyrobin

Greece

Knossos

November 2025 Wrap-Up

Personal Highlights from this month:

  • Miss R got her teeth fixed, and they look fantastic!! The dentist did such a nice job, and you can’t tell that they are bonded. There is no line.
  • We had a quiet Halloween. For the first time in almost 20 years, I didn’t go out trick-or-treating with my kids. Miss R went with a friend, and Mr. Z stayed home. Miss B and Miss J visited their former college to catch up with friends.
  • We took Mr. Z to his college’s open house. He seemed to really enjoy being there and has decided to double major in History and Anthropology.
  • Miss R went on her school’s academic award field trip to a local roller skating rink. The school starts off by awarding kids who have a D or above with field trips (done once a quarter). Then it moves to C and above, and the next two field trips are A/B honor roll and above. If any of the kids have received disciplinary actions (ISS, OSS, or being kicked off the bus), they cannot attend, even if they have good grades. I think it’s a great idea and motivates the kids to do their best. Miss R had a great time but did end up hurting her knee.

Reading Highlights from this month:

  • I read two books from the Oatmeal collection (The Terrible and Wonderful Reasons Why I Run and Why Grizzly Bears Should Wear Underpants). I was neutral about these books. I’m not sure if I would read the rest of the books in the collection.
  • I read and finished Bloodline by Jess Lourey. What I liked the most about this book was that Joan was an unreliable narrator. I couldn’t trust anything that she said or saw. There were two massive twists. One that took me by surprise, and the other one I kinda saw coming but didn’t want to believe it (the ick factor was huge).
  • I read book 3 of the Friendships and Festivals series (Love and Latkes). I found the romance between Abe and Batya sweet. I also loved the cooking show background.
  • I read books 1 and 2 of the All for the Game series (The Foxhole Court and The Raven King). While I liked these books, I do not recommend them for anyone under the age of 18. There are scenes in these books that disturbed me.
  • I read and finished The Alloy Era (Meru and Loka). I had mixed feelings about this duology. On the one hand, I found the storylines fascinating. But, on the other hand, it got very sciency, and I will admit that my eyes glazed over a couple of times.
  • I read The Last Goodbye by Caroline Finnerty. While I liked the storyline and thought that it was beautifully written, Kate’s character ruined it for me. She was completely immature and selfish throughout the entire book (excluding the chapters with Eva, when she was a teenager, where her behavior was somewhat justified). She just left a bad taste in my mouth, and honestly, I don’t know how Ben managed to deal with her childlike behavior.
  • I read and finished the Fae Isles series (Heart of Silk and Shadows, Court of Blood and Bindings, Lord of Gold and Glory, Ruins of Sea and Souls, Queens of Mist and Madness, In Love and War, and With Wing and Claw). This series was excellent and I highly recommend it. The main male character is yummy but also stabby and murdery. He is on the darker end of the moral gray scale. The main female character is stubborn, prickly, and full of issues. I absolutely loved this series!!
  • I also started the Cambric Creek series by reading The Minoan Bride and Morning Glory Milk Farm. I will be finishing this series in December. So look for my quick take on the series in December’s wrap-up.

Books I Read:


Monthly Playlist (I use songs featured in the book, if there are any, along with a playlist generated by ChatGPT).


Featured Artist

Popsugar Reading Challenge 2025—November

Prompts I finished in November


A book about a run club


A book about a cult


A book that features a character with chronic pain

The main female character has sickle cell anemia

A book with a snake on the cover or in the title

Black snake on cover

WWW Wednesday: October 29th, 2025

WWW Wednesday is a weekly meme that Sam hosts at Taking on a World of Words.

The Three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?

What did you recently finish reading?

What do you think you’ll read next?

Here is what I am reading, recently finished, and plan to read from Thursday to Wednesday.

Let me know if you have read or are planning on reading any of these books!!

Happy Reading!


What I am currently reading:

Perfect town. Perfect homes. Perfect families. It’s enough to drive some women mad… In a tale inspired by real events, pregnant journalist Joan Harken is cautiously excited to follow her fiancé back to his Minnesota hometown. After spending a childhood on the move and chasing the screams and swirls of news-rich city life, she’s eager to settle down. Lilydale’s motto, “Come Home Forever,” couldn’t be more inviting. And yet, something is off in the picture-perfect village. The friendliness borders on intrusive. Joan can’t shake the feeling that every move she makes is being tracked. An archaic organization still seems to hold the town in thrall. So does the sinister secret of a little boy who vanished decades ago. And unless Joan is imagining things, a frighteningly familiar figure from her past is on watch in the shadows. Her fiancé tells her she’s being paranoid. He might be right. Then again, she might have moved to the deadliest small town on earth.


What I recently finished reading:

This is not just a book about running. It’s a book about cupcakes. It’s a book about suffering.

It’s a book about gluttony, vanity, bliss, electrical storms, ranch dressing, and Godzilla. It’s a book about all the terrible and wonderful reasons we wake up each day and propel our bodies through rain, shine, heaven, and hell.

From #1 New York Times best-selling author, Matthew Inman, AKA The Oatmeal, comes this hilarious, beautiful, poignant collection of comics and stories about running, eating, and one cartoonist’s reasons for jogging across mountains until his toenails fall off.

Containing over 70 pages of never-before-seen material, including “A Lazy Cartoonist’s Guide to Becoming a Runner”


What I plan on reading Thursday through Sunday:

You can’t make a latke without breaking a few eggs…

Batya Averman is ecstatic when a latke fry-off committee chooses her as its web designer—until she learns the event is in Rivertown, New York, the hometown she fled years ago. But she’s no longer the girl with an embarrassing history and an unrequited crush on Abe Neumann. This delicious competition is Batya’s chance to further her career, and this time she won’t run.

Abe Neumann can’t pass up the opportunity to enter the town’s latke contest. He dreams of throwing caution to the wind and leaving his accounting firm, opening a Jewish deli, and choosing his own happiness. The prize money would bring him closer to making his dream a reality, but when Batya comes back to town, Abe remembers that a deli isn’t the only thing he’s wished for.

When the fry-off’s celebrity host has to pull out of the competition, Batya is determined to step up to the challenge. This Hanukkah, can Abe fix the past and convince Batya that dreams, like latkes, are better when they’re shared?

Neil Josten is the newest addition to the Palmetto State University Exy team. He’s short, he’s fast, he’s got a ton of potential—and he’s the runaway son of the murderous crime lord known as The Butcher.

Signing a contract with the PSU Foxes is the last thing a guy like Neil should do. The team is high profile and he doesn’t need sports crews broadcasting pictures of his face around the nation. His lies will hold up only so long under this kind of scrutiny and the truth will get him killed.

But Neil’s not the only one with secrets on the team. One of Neil’s new teammates is a friend from his old life, and Neil can’t walk away from him a second time. Neil has survived the last eight years by running. Maybe he’s finally found someone and something worth fighting for.

The Foxes are a fractured mess, but their latest disaster might be the miracle they’ve always needed to come together as a team. The one person standing in their way is Andrew, and the only one who can break through his personal barriers is Neil.

Except Andrew doesn’t give up anything for free and Neil is terrible at trusting anyone but himself. The two don’t have much time to come to terms with their situation before outside forces start tearing them apart. Riko is intent on destroying Neil’s fragile new life, and the Foxes have just become collateral damage.

Neil’s days are numbered, but he’s learning the hard way to go down fighting for what he believes in, and Neil believes in Andrew even if Andrew won’t believe in himself.

One woman and her pilot are about to change the future of the species in an epic space opera about aspiration, compassion, and redemption by Hugo and Nebula Award finalist S. B. Divya.

For five centuries, human life has been restricted to Earth, while posthuman descendants called alloys freely explore the galaxy. But when the Earthlike planet of Meru is discovered, two unlikely companions venture forth to test the habitability of this unoccupied new world and the future of human-alloy relations.

For Jayanthi, the adopted human child of alloy parents, it’s an opportunity to rectify the ancient reputation of her species as avaricious and destructive, and to give humanity a new place in the universe. For Vaha, Jayanthi’s alloy pilot, it’s a daunting yet irresistible adventure to find success as an individual.

As the journey challenges their resolve in unexpected ways, the two form a bond that only deepens with their time alone on Meru. But how can Jayanthi succeed at freeing humanity from its past when she and Vaha have been set up to fail?

Against all odds, hope is human, too.