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New book brings Atlas Obscura site’s wonders to printed page

By Korea Herald

Published : Sept. 21, 2016 - 14:22

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NEW YORK (AP) -- An elf school in Iceland. A hospital for falcons in the Middle East. A museum in Independence, Missouri, for artwork made from hair.

These are the types of attractions featured on the Atlas Obscura website, a fan favorite among curiosity-seeking travelers. Now the site is bringing its geeky and magical world of wonders to the printed page.

The new “Atlas Obscura” book offers a sampling of 700 of the website’s 10,000 curious attractions, from a pile of rocks in Butte, Montana, that makes bell-tone rings when struck with a hammer, to the skulls and body parts on display at Philadelphia’s Mutter Museum.

AtlasObscura.com was launched in 2009. Today it has over 5 million unique visitors a month and 12 million page views, along with over 120,000 registered users. But it is not the type of travel site that features infinity pools, five-star hotels and tasting menus. Instead, you are more likely to find macabre historic landmarks, mysterious natural wonders or odd cultural phenomena, like a Swedish university’s collection of plaster-cast noses or Las Pozas park in Mexico, a subtropical garden filled with surrealist sculptures.

The book, out Tuesday, is published by Workman, the company that published “1,000 Places to See Before You Die.” Workman is billing “Atlas Obscura” as a “bucket-list guide to over 700 of the most curious, unusual, off-the-beaten path destinations from around the globe.” Cover blurbs include this from Lena Dunham: “‘Atlas Obscura’ may be the only thing that can still inspire me to leave my apartment.”

In this July 12, 1999 file photo, the skull of a giant peers out at visitors at the Mutter Museum in Philadelphia. The Mutter Museum is among hundreds of curious attractions featured in “Atlas Obscura,” a new book that catalogues some of the intriguing wonders featured on AtlasObscura.com, a website beloved by travelers with a taste for the offbeat. (AP-Yonhap) In this July 12, 1999 file photo, the skull of a giant peers out at visitors at the Mutter Museum in Philadelphia. The Mutter Museum is among hundreds of curious attractions featured in “Atlas Obscura,” a new book that catalogues some of the intriguing wonders featured on AtlasObscura.com, a website beloved by travelers with a taste for the offbeat. (AP-Yonhap)

Why take Atlas Obscura out of the virtual world and onto the printed page?

“There is nothing like a book,” said Dylan Thuras, who founded the site with Joshua Foer.

“It’s hard to explain to people exactly what Atlas Obscura is, so we just felt like it would be so nice to distill this into a beautiful, physical object and be able to hand it to someone.

“Open it to any page and hopefully it gives people a sense of joy and wonder. For me, having worked in the ephemeral medium of the internet for so long, to hold something in my hand and say this is the result of years of work, it feels satisfying.”

Thuras said the process of winnowing the website’s 10,000 entries down to 700 for the book was painful because so many favorites had to go, but he sees the volume “as a kind of entry point. The hope is that someone unfamiliar with what we’re doing might see the book and suddenly something clicks, that the world is full of these incredible magical places.”

Cover of “Atlas Obscura” (AP-Yonhap) Cover of “Atlas Obscura” (AP-Yonhap)

One of Thuras’ favorite entries in the book describes a handwoven bridge that he walked across in Peru. Every couple of years, villagers have to re-weave the bridge using twine made from grasses. “It’s this unbroken piece of cultural history that you get to walk across, with this raging river below. It’s what you think of when you think of adventure.”

The website is crowdsourced and gets many more submissions than its editors can vet, but Thuras says they rarely get submissions that are off-base. Fans “really seem to understand what we’re after,” he said, adding that most of their followers are what he calls “adventure nerds,” serious travelers who “like diving into unusual subjects, getting out there and exploring.”

The company has a staff of 19 and is located in a former pencil factory in the Brooklyn, New York, neighborhood of Greenpoint, once known as a working-class Polish area but lately a trendy magnet for those in their 20s and 30s. Revenue comes from ads and sponsored content, but Atlas Obscura has also started organizing events and tours, partnering with tour guides and nonprofits. One such event offered a night of music at Green-Wood Cemetery, a sprawling 19th-century historic landmark in Brooklyn known for its landscaped grounds and ornate monuments.

Atlas Obscura is also starting to offer international tours, starting with several small group trips to Cuba this fall. But the itineraries will not be the usual top 10 hotspots found on every other tour. “We’re going to Iceland in the winter, taking people to a plane wreck site on the rocks,” Thuras said.