“…However, inspired by studies that encourage a geographical view to the art of reading (See Keighren, 2006;Livingstone, 2005;Hones, 2008), this analysis shifts attention to children's books as entry-points to discuss spaces as this receives little attention in the literature, not least the trivial spaces (See discussion in Theoretical Framework). Studies looking at the crossroads of literature and geography typically include grand spatialities found in adventure stories (Hones andEndo, 2006), world-building (Kitchin andKneale, 2002;Kneale, 2006), 'place-defining' novels (Shortridge, 1991), or introduction to geography and regions (Brooker-Gross, 1981;Gesler, 2004). However, the COVID-19 pandemic context calls for attention to everyday spaces because it is a crisis related to distance and mobility-spatial matters.…”