Annette Lees is a night owl, or perhaps a bat woman. At least she was for an intensive period while she researched and wrote After Dark, immersing herself in all the nuanced phases and shades of the night as she built an impressively comprehensive, holistic and fascinating understanding about what happens out there while most of us are tucked up in bed. But since childhood she has been in love with nature and the outdoors. The catalyst behind this wonderful book was a gift to Lees from her husband – a ‘seriously cool’ olive green bat monitor, which on its maiden voyage, immediately registered an overhead long tailed bat from her front lawn.
‘Night doesn’t fall, it rises. The sky is the last place to lose the light, the shadowy land first.’
From the first pages of After Dark I was constantly surprised and delighted as Lees recounted scientific, historic, cultural (both Māori and Pākehā) and personal facts and observations, weaving them all in to a cohesive story with great eloquence, colour and feeling.
‘Despite the sound falling like a wave of rain over the landscape, it felt intensely private, a sound made of each of the thousands of crickets in this paddock. If I stood still long enough to become invisible to them, the singing became louder and rhythmic, a hypnotic chorus of pulse and shimmer that filled the dark bowl of the clearing.’
While richly filled with all manner of captivating themes, anecdotes and facts, After Dark follows a clear structure, beginning with a chapter about Night Time and ending with another about Break of Day (the dawn chorus – far more of a symphony than I realised and also New Zealand’s measure of biodiversity). Then between these are chapters, each devoted to an hour of the 12 making up a night.
5pm, Dusk. Did you know that there are three grades of twilight?
6pm, Close of Day. The 6pm swill only ceased in 1967, tramps and swagmen of the great depression, homelessness today, blackouts during World War II, Good night Kiwi 1981 to 1994, eating a restaurant meal in total darkness. Did you know that the horizon is about three kilometres away, but night shrinks our world? And white glows in the dark. All that in just an hour!
As the hours roll by you can read about Aotearoa’s short and long-tailed bats, our insects, kiwi, kākāpō, light houses, night fishing, fireworks, fear of the dark, night lights, sky sanctuaries, astronomy, deep space, sleep patterns … each hour of the night is far more fascinating than I could have imagined until reading After Dark. All 14 chapters also begin and end with vignettes in little grey boxes recounting Lees’ personal night time experiences.
After Dark also delivers compelling reminders about the tenuous plight of our native species. Lees has a particular affinity with our native bats, reminding me just what incredible creatures they are and why it’s so important that we humans cease our disregard and excesses that have taken these and countless other species to the brink of oblivion.
If you want to get fired up, to smile a lot, be entertained and enthralled by myriad facts and insights, or just illuminate your night hours, After Dark – Walking in to the nights of Aotearoa is a must read.