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46 pages 1 hour read

Book of Night

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2022

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Background

Cultural Context: An Overview of Shadow Magic

The magical system presented in Book of Night is based in part on established psychiatric, spiritual, and folkloric traditions. By drawing on these established cultural beliefs, Black intends her system of magic to feel both authentic and psychologically complex.

In mental health, “shadow work” is a psychological practice that involves facing one’s darkest inner self through methods like journaling, meditation, psychoanalysis, and dream therapy. This technique offers a way of addressing internalized trauma and relies on the work of 20th-century Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung, who believed that everyone has a “shadow self” where they put their darker, less socially adhering impulses—much like Remy does with Red in Book of Night. The foundation of shadow work is the idea that these inner and outer selves—the persona and the shadow—are in conflict with one another. By using shadow work techniques, one can bring these disparate parts of themselves into balance.

Occult traditions also feature shadows, which form creatures such as the fetch from Irish folklore and the Tibetan tulpa. A fetch is believed to be an apparition of the self—a ghost of the living. Seeing one’s fetch presages death, though fetches could also become magical familiars carrying out the living person’s will. This second version of the fetch bleeds into legends surrounding the tulpa. Also called a thoughtform or egregore, this creature, originally from Buddhist folklore, is conceived of as an artificially created designed to do the bidding of the magician who created it through intense concentration and an exchange of energy. This is very similar to the process in Book of Night of feeding blood to a shadow to give it living consciousness. The novel’s Blights, or untethered shadows that go rogue, owe something to this folkloric tradition.

Authorial Context: Holly Black’s Fabulist Fiction

Holly Black is a celebrated author of young adult and middle-grade fantasy fiction. Among her most famous works are the Modern Faerie Tales series (2002), The Spiderwick Chronicles (2003), and The Folk of Air series (2018). Her works often update or modernize figures and ideas from traditional folklore and fairy tales, using them to juxtapose fantastical and urban environments. The majority of Black’s protagonists are contemporary people with real-world struggles written to resonate with her target audience. Book of Night represents a departure from her previous work, as the first novel not aimed at younger readers. In addition to her novels, Black has also published several graphic novels and a wide range of anthologized short stories. Although the content and characters vary, all of her work shares a distinct authorial voice and finds ways to introduce magic into the mundane.

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