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‘Turning off the porch lights’ to reveal nature’s hidden marvels

Leigh Ann Henion has stepped through the looking glass. You can too, she says. Simply turn off the lights and venture outside.

That’s the promise of Ms. Henion’s new book, “Night Magic: Adventures Among Glowworms, Moon Gardens, and Other Marvels of the Dark.” In it, she details her own journey to become reacquainted with darkness. Along the way, she meets a wonderland of nocturnal creatures, wrestles with the societal tendency to chase away darkness, and confronts her own fears of the unknown.

The result is a nature lover’s guide to the dark that unfolds like a novel. Ms. Henion spoke with the Monitor’s Noelle Swan. Their conversation has been edited and condensed.

Why We Wrote This

Darkness is something many of us have been taught to push away. Author Leigh Ann Henion invites readers to rethink their relationship to the unknown and what it has to offer.

In your preface, you talk about the Western world having a deep cultural bias against darkness. What made you want to break from that tradition with this book?

When I started the book, I don’t know that I necessarily knew how deep that cultural bias was. But once you’re alert to it, you start noticing it everywhere. We’re taught to fight the dying of the light. The book from the beginning [helped me] to think about darkness, not as a place of doom or a place of dearth but as something that actually holds value.

What was your initial spark for this book?

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