"Nobody who has not taken one can imagine the beauty of a walk
through Rome by full moon," wrote Goethe in 1787. Sadly, the
imagination is all we have today: in Rome, as in every other modern
city, moonlight has been banished, replaced by the twenty-four-hour
glow of streetlights in a world that never sleeps. Moonlight, for
most of us, is no more.
So James Attlee set out to find it. "Nocturne" is the record of
that journey, a traveler's tale that takes readers on a dazzling
nighttime trek that ranges across continents, from prehistory to
the present, and through both the physical world and the realms of
art and literature. Attlee attends a Buddhist full-moon ceremony in
Japan, meets a moon jellyfish on a beach in Northern France, takes
a moonlit hike in the Arizona desert, and experiences a lunar
eclipse on New Year's Eve atop the snowbound Welsh hills. Each
locale is illuminated not just by the moonlight he seeks, but by
the culture and history that define it. We learn about Mussolini's
pathological fear of moonlight; trace the connections between
Caspar David Friedrich, Rudolf Hess, and the Apollo space mission;
and meet the inventors of the Moonlight Collector in the American
desert, who aim to cure all kinds of ailments with concentrated
lunar rays. Svevo and Blake, Whistler and Hokusai, Li Po and
Marinetti are all enlisted, as foils, friends, or fellow travelers,
on Attlee's journey.
Pulled by the moon like the tide, Attlee is firmly in a tradition
of wandering pilgrims that stretches from Basho to Sebald; like
them, he presents our familiar world anew.
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