The End of Night: Searching for Natural Darkness in an Age of Artificial Light

By Paul Bogard

Streetlamps, neon signs – an ever-present glow that has changed the natural world and adversely affected our health; Paul Bogard illuminates the problems caused by a lack of darkness.

We live awash in artificial light. But night’s natural darkness has always been invaluable for our spiritual health and the health of the natural world, and every living creature suffers from its loss.

Paul Bogard investigates what we mean when we talk about darkness. He travels between the intensely lit cities – from glittering Las Vegas to the gas-lit streets of Westminster – and the sites where real darkness still remains, such as the Brecon Beacons and the island of Sark. Encountering scientists, physicians, activists and writers, Bogard discusses how light is negatively affecting the natural world; how our well-being is significantly influenced by darkness or its lack; and how it’s not a matter of using light at night or not, but rather when and where, how and how much.

A beautiful invocation of our constant companion, the night, which returns every day of our lives, this book reminds us of the power and mystery of the dark.

Format: Paperback
Release Date: 27 Feb 2014
Pages: 336
ISBN: 978-0-00-742821-2
Price: £10.99 (Export Price) , £10.99, €None
Paul Bogard, PhD., is a widely published author of journalism, creative nonfiction, scholarship and is the editor of ‘Let There Be Night: Testimony on Behalf of the Dark’. He has also presented on darkness and light pollution at conferences, universities, nature centres, national parks, bookstores and churches. He studied Literature and Environment at the University of Nevada, and now teaches writing at Wake Forest University in North Carolina.

”'Forget Brian Cox - Paul Bogard is the kind of guy I’d want to go star-gazing with … Bogard’s delight in the night is infectious … The appeal of Bogard’s book derives not just from his often wide-eyed enthusiasm for his subject, but also from the constellation of characters he encounters on his journeys into the night” - Stephanie Cross, Sunday Telegraph.

”'Bogard sets about his investigations with an energetic purposiveness and enterprise … To seek to let back in a little of the lost starlight and allow more of nature's shadow to reassert its balm seem to me both modest and wholesome aims, and Bogard's book does much to make a case for them” - Salley Vickers, Observer

”'Bogard takes us light years through history, science, psychology, art, folklore and his own travels, looking for an unpolluted dark and starry, starry night” - Iain Finlayson, The Times

”'Thought provoking … convincing that artificial light has blinded us to the beauties of the night. Perhaps it’s time to follow him over to the dark side” - Mail on Sunday

”'Bogard’s book is a literary journey ” - in the space of a few pages, we walk with Virginia Woolf, Charles Dickens and Rétif de la Bretonne. It is also a pilgrimage to our capitals of light. This is a rich book with a rewarding appendix of notes. The big thing is that, as you read it, you too will want to reclaim the night and perhaps rediscover the heavens of the Enlightenment’ Nature Magazine

”'Does [the end of night] matter? It’s impossible to read this thorough and engaging survey of the subject (how much more professionally American writers approach non-fiction) and not be convinced that it does” - David Sexton, Evening Standard

”'It should be read, and its ardour is impressive” - The Scotsman

”'Super little book … This is a hunt for a proper night sky … and it’s proper fascinating” - Sunday Sport