Illustrated children's book cover for Lights Out by Marsha Diane Arnold and Susan Reagan. A bear, fox, and a bird looko out from a cave into the night.

Book Recommendation — October 2023

Lights Out opens in a new tab

By Marsha Diane Arnold, Author
Susan Reagan, Illustrator

Creative Editions, 2020.

This book is a quest. Fox and Beetle are ready for darkness and set off in search of the Dark of Night. One can list the lights in your own neighborhood: house lights, car lights, truck lights, billboards, store signs, streetlights.

Author Marsha Diane Arnold was inspired by her father who taught her to love the night sky and later from camping at 10,000 feet in the Sierra Nevadas. The journey depicted in Lights Out draws attention to an important concern that affects the ecosystem: light pollution.

Author’s Notes:

We hear a lot about air and water pollution but not as much about light pollution. Light pollution happens when there are too many — and the wrong kind of — artificial lights. Tall buildings with many lights confuse both migrating and local birds. Frogs don’t sing under artificial lights. Fireflies use their glow to communicate, but they can’t talk with each other when there is too much light. Nocturnal animals eat and hunt at night. If it’s not dark enough, they can’t hunt as effectively. Overexposure to artificial light changes the rhythms of animal and human bodies, sometimes affecting our sleep and overall health.

For centuries, people on Earth looked to the night sky for navigation, for inspiration, for wonder. But today, we can barely see that sky through all the artificial light. In fact, we see less than 1% of the night sky compared with people of the 1600s.

You can learn more about light pollution and what individuals can do about it through organizations such as the International Dark-Sky Association (IDA). Remember to observe the International Dark-Sky Week each April. It’s an annual event when stargazers around the world celebrate the dark.

Submitted by Karen Kosko

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