Title | : | Let There Be Night: Testimony on Behalf of the Dark |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 0874173280 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780874173284 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 208 |
Publication | : | First published August 18, 2008 |
Twenty-nine writers, poets, scientists, and scholars testify on behalf of darkness and against light pollutions diminishment of the night.
Let There Be Night: Testimony on Behalf of the Dark Reviews
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Overall, the essays collected here veer more toward the “how I feel about losing the night sky of my childhood” variety than suits me. That said, there are a number of well-written personal essays included that meld personal experience with “fact” in an interesting and thought-provoking way, and which I truly appreciate: Chet Raymo’s “Why the Night Sky is Dark,” Christopher Cokinos’s “ A Backyard History of Light,” Michael P. Branch’s “Ladder to the Pleiades,” Anne Matthews’s “The Sound of Falling Snow,” William L. Fox’s “Night in Mind,” Robin Wall Kimmerer’s “Nightfall,” and Christina Robertson’s “Circadian Heart.” As a whole, the collection emphatically communicates how imperative it is that we ameliorate light pollution and reclaim the dark skies of nighttime, both to protect and preserve an important human cultural experience (stargazing), as well as to disrupt as little as possible migratory bird behavior, astronomical activities, etc. As Chet Raymo succinctly states: “All this light directed upward has no utility on the ground; it provides no security or convenience for our nighttime activities.” We don’t need it, so lets dim the lights. In doing so, we may be able to, for example, bring the Pleiades and the Milky Way back into view. As Michael P. Branch so aptly notes in reference to the Seven Sisters, “Insofar as our visceral experience of them is concerned, these stars are critically endangered.”
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Go outside at night!
Since I started reading this book I don't think I've missed one sunset or the opportunity to at least see a few stars at night. Yeah, that's right. A few. It's very disheartening to read about the gorgeous starry night and then go outside and find a street lamp glaring at you while you try to imagine where the stars might be. This book makes a powerful statement. Some of the essays are a bit dry and didactic but the majority flow with such beautiful prose and almost poetry that I am inspired to await the night sky like never before. My favorites are by Alison Hawthorne Deming and Scott Russell Sanders. But there are many more that piqued my curiosity and really made me pay attention to amount of light pollution that surrounds what I used to consider a dark neighborhood. Unfortunately anything in the eastern sky is lost to me because of the glare of a street lamp. This book reminded me of the time my parents let me stay up all night in the backyard watching for meteors. I was thrilled to report 13 sightings to the local tv the next day. Now I can't remember the last time I saw a "shooting star". Are we really losing our night sky? Is it even possible that people don't care? -
Beautiful.
This is a compilation of 30 writers' thoughts on night--the precious, poetic portion of our life that is disappearing more each day. I loved it. Every perspective is covered; men and women, religious and atheistic, fearful and curious, all explain why darkness matters. It brings in astronomy, poetry, biology, psychology. It's expressed in mesmerizing memories of the Milky Way and the silence of self-contemplation.
I don't know if I'll ever have kids, but I fear that they'll never have the experience of looking up at a night sky, stars scattered like rice spilled over a black countertop. I wish everyone would read this, or at least step outside for a few minutes each night to feel how absolutely grand this universe is. -
In a potent collection of essays, Paul Bogard—author of THE END OF NIGHT—has compiled what he calls "testimony on behalf of the dark." The essays are grouped thematically and range in topics, covering everything from mythology to our animal bodies, but all revolve around the idea that pure, undiluted night sky and darkness are essential for our wellbeing.
These essays contain some of the most beautiful descriptions of night I've ever had the pleasure to read, and while all showcase deep commitment to the dark, most are not so bleak as Bogard's own work, which could make me feel less empowered and more hopeless at times—like those nature documentaries that show how we're killing everything instead of showing how beautiful and diverse life can be.
Personally, my favorite essays come from the last three sections, and include "Acquainted with the Night" by Gretchen Legler, "Nightfall" by Robin Wall Kimmerer (of BRAIDING SWEETGRASS fame), and an excerpt from Scott Russell Sanders' "Earth Body." -
This series of essays is a love story to the night. So many different facets of our relationship with darkness and night are touched upon. This is a pretty quick and easy read, well worth the effort. Not academic, but a mix of poetry, science, culture, and spirit.
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As a lover of the deep dark night-time hours and a seeker of dark sky places, and someone who can sit for hours beneath a night sky watching stars, I thoroughly enjoyed the short essays in this book on the positive powers and our human need for the dark. And how our current overly-lit world has taken us away from the power of night and the dark, and what we have lost in our souls as the result. If you love the night sky, and seek out the quiet late-night hours when the world is largely silent, this book is for you. These essays are written by 29 writers, scientists, poets, and scholars and so some are better than others, but I enjoyed them all.
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Anthology. Night is inspiring, healthy, and disappearing. Repeated theme. Last entry the best, sort of a IDS lecture that darker nights, even in cities, are very possible