Atlas Of Cursed Places: A Travel Guide To Dange... -
: Places like the Nevada Triangle , where over 2,000 aircraft have vanished, or Kasanka National Park , where 8 million bats regularly darken the sky, highlight the terrifying power of the natural world.
While lauded for its "pithy historical profiles" and "sly mystery", some readers find the use of the word "cursed" to be problematic when applied to real-world suffering in places like Gaza or Beirut . Critics argue that labeling human-rights crises or economic struggles as "curses" can be insensitive, though Le Carrer maintains a tone of "dramatic respect" for the locations he chronicles. Atlas of Cursed Places: A Travel Guide to Dange...
Le Carrer organizes these "hellscapes" into three primary categories of blight: : Places like the Nevada Triangle , where
: Destinations like Jharia, India —a coal town where the ground has been burning for decades—and the Aokigahara Forest illustrate the tragic consequences of human history and environmental neglect. Aesthetic vs. Utility Le Carrer organizes these "hellscapes" into three primary
The book is noted more for its artistic presentation than its practical use as a guide. It features vintage, pastel-toned maps and period illustrations that evoke a sense of armchair adventure rather than modern navigation. Reviewers from The StoryGraph and The Map Room point out that while visually stunning, the maps are often too "zoomed in" or outdated to help a real traveler find these specific coordinates. Critical Perspective
In , journalist Olivier Le Carrer presents a captivating "anti-travelogue" that explores 40 locations worldwide defined by misfortune, danger, or mystery. The Architecture of a Curse