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46 pages 1 hour read

Holly Black

Book of Night

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2022

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Symbols & Motifs

Shadows

Shadows are at the heart of Book of Night, and they’re used as both psychological symbols and fabulist motifs. While the opening line positions shadows as playful companions—“Any child can be chased by their shadow” (1)—the first chapter pivots to explore how shadows have become a powerful and potentially dangerous magical artifact. Bar patrons display their cosmetically enhanced shadows: “One must have recently gotten her shadow altered, because she kept moving so the light would catch it and project her new self onto the wall. It had horns and wings, like a succubus” (5). In this way, shadows become a form of self-expression, like fashion choices or tattoos.

In addition, shadows become part of a lifestyle trend in which people address perceived faults through shadow manipulation. Through news articles, it’s implied that one can work with this shadow self to remove desires, negative habits, and even fear. This creates a practical and addictive way to shape one’s inner self. However, this method creates results that haven’t been earned or fully processed, ultimately making one even more vulnerable than before.

Finally, shadows also have a deeper meaning. Holly Black draws from Jungian psychology to present shadows as manifestations of the “shadow self,” or the hidden side of one’s inner nature. This is most evident in the dynamic between Remy and Red; Remy takes every emotion, memory, and trauma that is too difficult to face head-on and feeds it to Red. While this divide may be comfortable, it is a maladaptive way to process one’s emotions.

The Liber Noctem

The stolen Liber Noctem, also called Book of Night or Book of Blights, is the novel’s MacGuffin—a literary device that uses a tangible object as a way to motivate the characters. The book turns out to be a fraud: It wasn’t stolen in the first place, nor does it contain the rituals believed to be encompassed in it. However, the idea of the book incites the characters into action.

The book means different things to different characters, typically taking them through a journey of temptation and disillusionment. For Charlie, it represents temptation into her old life: She is hired to steal it back for Lionel Salt, and her detective work about its location leads to several illegal activities. Although Charlie initially resists this pull into the past, Salt uses the book to control and entrap her. For the Hierophant, it represents freedom—the Hierophant believes that within the book is the magic necessary to bring his shadow to life without killing him. For Salt, it represents control: He orchestrates the supposed theft and retrieval of the book as a way of becoming a member of the Cabal.

Salt’s intention is for Charlie to fail in retrieving the lost book, but when she actually fulfills her task by finding the book in Salt’s safe, the Hierophant comes to understand the emptiness of Salt’s promises regarding the hidden ritual, shattering their trust. An object that Salt used to have control over his adversaries ultimately leads to his downfall.

Blood

Blood features heavily throughout the novel, predominantly in a mystical capacity. In the world of Book of Night, shadows are quickened, or woken into sapient beings, through bloodshed. This is established immediately in the novel’s prologue: “Just a little drink every day, he’d heard someone on the television say about their shadow. And it will be your best friend in the world” (1). The image of a small child attempting to draw blood for a ritualistic sacrifice is jarring and sets the tone for Black’s noir-tinged, dystopic world.

Traditionally, blood is a symbol of life force. In some religious traditions, blood is also a synecdoche of a human being—the part that stands in for the whole. For example, the ritual of communion in Christianity and the practice of using taglocks in voodoo both rely on the idea of a small symbolic fragment representing a specific being (Jesus Christ and the subject of rituals, respectively). In the novel, an offering of blood serves both functions. The exchange of energy instills life force into one’s shadow; it also allows that shadow to become an aspect of oneself.

Eventually, it’s revealed that the secret to giving a shadow a human shape is to offer it one’s entire life force in the form of blood. This is how, upon Remy’s death, Red becomes Vince and how, after the death of the Hierophant’s host body, his shadow becomes the Blight. Ominously, the novel closes with Charlie feeding newly en-shadowed Red her blood, binding them together.

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