Night magic Adventures among glowworms, moon gardens, and other marvels of the dark

Leigh Ann Henion

Book - 2024

"In a glorious celebration of the dark, nature writer Leigh Ann Henion invites us to leave our well-lit homes and step outside to embrace the biodiversity that surrounds us"--

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Subjects
Published
Chapel Hill : Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Leigh Ann Henion (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781643753362
  • Preface
  • Season of Inspiration
  • Fireflies Blinking
  • Synchronicity
  • Rising
  • Spring
  • Salamanders Migrating
  • Under a Rock
  • Where the Sidewalk Ends
  • Watching a Salamander Dance
  • Owls Nesting
  • The Astronomer and the Owl
  • Blue Light Refugees
  • What Is Darkness, Really?
  • All the Life We Cannot See
  • Glowworms Squirming
  • Local Tourist
  • The Cartography of Evening
  • Summer
  • Moths Transforming
  • Shadowbox
  • Mothapalooza
  • Invitation to a Moth Ball
  • Bats Flying
  • Bat Blitz
  • Close Encounters
  • Flight for Life
  • Foxfire Glowing
  • Vision Quest
  • Learning to Walk
  • Tiny Lanterns
  • Fall
  • Moon Gardens Blooming
  • The Language of Flowers
  • Heirloom
  • Secret Gardens
  • Humans Surviving
  • Burnout
  • Core Strength
  • Remembering How to Blink
  • Acknowledgments
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Additional Resources
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this lyrical account, nature writer Henion (Phenomenal) spotlights the nocturnal wildlife she's observed around her home in western North Carolina. Explaining that spotted salamanders live underground except for a few nights each spring when they emerge to mate, Henion recounts assisting a college biology class transport salamanders across a road that cut the amphibians off from their breeding grounds. Humans benefit when they live in harmony with nature, she contends, discussing how she planted trees and put up "bat houses" (slender bird boxes) to shield bats from light pollution and habitat loss while they, in turn, stemmed the proliferation of mosquitos and the pathogens they carry. Elsewhere, she discusses attending a moth-watching festival, hunting for bioluminescent fungi, and watching jasmine tobacco's nocturnal blooms. The science intrigues ("Moth scales resonate at frequencies almost perfectly matched" to bats' echolocating calls, "muffling echoes that might have otherwise revealed" the moth's location), but Henion's greatest gift is her ability to evoke the sense of wonder that follows from tuning in to the natural world: "Slowly, entire constellations of fireflies rise from the coal-black earth around me, twinkling with oxygen. I attempt to align with their rhythm: Inhale, light. Exhale, dark. We are breathing, in sync, on this complicated planet." This will fill readers with awe. Agent: Heather Carr, Friedrich Agency. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A lyrical, fascinating story about exploring the secret world of darkness and the remarkable creatures within it. In today's hectic, digitally focused world, writes Henion, we have become too used to an excess of illumination: the unblinking screen, the persistent streetlight, the overbright room. Furthermore, we have lost a sense of the presence of darkness and an understanding of what happens there. The author explored this idea in her 2016 bookPhenomenal: A Hesitant Adventurer's Search for Wonder in the Natural World, but in her latest, she dives deeply into a world that is unknown to most readers. She begins with fireflies, which are plentiful in the mountains of North Carolina, where she lives, as well as glowworms and night-traveling salamanders. She chronicles her travels through her area and further afield, encountering guides and naturalists who are studying nighttime creatures. The animals and birds that come out at night can be difficult to spot, but Henion finds that her eyes and spirit can slowly adapt to the darker, more natural world. She also describes the plants that bloom under the moonlight, often with strange structures and rich perfume to attract moths and insects. In a striking chapter, the author examines the luminous fungi known as foxfire, which has a beauty all its own. She recounts her experience of making fire from natural materials as evening gathered and how she felt connected to the long line of humanity. There is a sense of renewal throughout, and she realizes the importance of occasionally escaping from the world of unrelenting, artificial light: "It is only by the power of light and the grace of darkness that we're able to rest and rise, then rest and rise again." Henion writes with poetic grace, blending her journey of discovery with the natural wonders in our own backyards. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.