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Alaska Scrapbook

 
   
  Though the world of The Cloud Atlas ranges from the Sea of Japan to the Chesapeake Bay and dozens of places in between, most of the action takes place in and around three places in Alaska: Bethel, Kodiak and Anchorage. Photos and notes from each location appear below.
 
     

 

Bethel
 
I was first drawn to Bethel when I noticed a lonely point plotted on a map of Alaskan balloon bomb landings. Eventually, much of the present-day action of the novel came to be set here. Bethel--its name means gate of heaven--is a real place, located in mainland Alaska's far southwest on the Kuskokwim River, the Yukon's less famous but equally mighty cousin. For much of the year, Bethel is only accessible by air, although ships bring supplies every summer. It's nicknamed the Paris of the Tundra, although the photos may leave you wondering why. (It's because Bethel is the hub for a large network of Yup'ik Eskimo villages.) As for the, um, lack of tidiness visible in some of the shots--this is the Alaskan bush; nothing gets thrown away, as you never know when you may need something, and a replacement is often very, very far away.
     

 

Kodiak Kodiak hosted a number of important WWII installations, and today is home to the largest US Coast Guard base.  It's also home to the largest population of the world's largest bear, the Kodiak Bear. An important scene in the novel takes place just north of Kodiak on a smaller island, named Shuyak.
     

 

Anchorage & vicinity The narrator of The Cloud Atlas spends much of his WWII years in Anchorage. The city has changed a great deal since then, but several of the landmarks referred to in the book remain.  
   

Banner photo: detail from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/Department of Commerce hurricane photo.