Megan Eaves-Egenes is a travel writer and advocate for sustainable travel and dark skies. From 2013 to 2019 she was Lonely Planet’s North and Central Asia Destination Editor. She has written numerous guidebooks, including to China and South Korea, and her journalism has appeared in the Independent, BBC, The Times, CNN, Culture Trip, TimeOut and others. In 2019, Megan founded DarkSky London, an advocacy group committed to reducing light pollution and protecting the natural night in the British capital. Since 2021, she has served as Editor of Nightscape, DarkSky’s quarterly members’ magazine. Originally from New Mexico, she has lived all over the world – from China to Prague to Ireland – and has called London home for the last 14 years.
'Dark sky advocate Eaves-Egenes . . . tells stories not of the stars but of the night and its people in remote, dark places from Ireland to Italy via Tanzania, Japan and her native New Mexico. Her adventures reveal Western culture as dangerously allergic to darkness — cue the intensifying light pollution in cities — but also how only at night can we reevaluate, reset and renew. There's a deep love of the night sky woven into every sentence, and a powerful lesson for humanity as it fakes a nocturnal existence: only in the stillness of night can we see the light' -- <B>Jamie Carter</B> * <B><I>Forbes</I></B> * 'Nightfaring is an invitation to explore how the night sky connects us – to the past, to ourselves, to the planet and to the cosmos. Through rich storytelling and deeply reported histories, Megan leads us on a raw, multisensory journey into the less-trodden nocturnal world. This introspective read is a push to reimagine our relationship to the night ... It's also a reminder that travel, when done well, can be life's greatest teacher' -- <B>Stephanie Vermillion, author of <I>100 Nights of a Lifetime</I></B> 'Mixing myth and history with the latest science, Eaves weaves her story with clear, insightful prose, offering an entertaining journey into the darkness that is so vital for life on earth and so easily forgotten. Nightfaring reminds us of all that being in the dark brings alive and allows, what we lose when we overuse artificial light, and the good wildness that makes the night so key to our wellbeing' -- <b data-olk-copy-source=""MessageBody"" >Paul Bogard, author of <i>The End of Night </i></b> ‘A truly powerful paean to the night sky offering a kaleidoscopic mix of science, adventure, spirituality, psychology and insights into our inner lives and deepest fears' -- <B>Caroline Eden, author of <I>Samarkand </I>and <I>Cold Kitchen</I></B> ‘From Uzbek observatories to Guaraní fire blessings, Maori star compasses to Irish banshees, Nightfaring is an engaging and illuminating exploration of our relationship with darkness and the night sky. A thoughtful, perceptive and insightful writer, Megan Eaves-Egenes will change the way you look at the stars’ -- <B>Shafik Meghji, author of <I>Crossed Off the Map</I> and <I>Small Earthquakes</I></B> 'Megan Eaves-Egenes readers on a journey around the world to reveal what we’re collectively missing out on under the influence of artificial light. In captivating scenes that take place in Tanzania, New Zealand, Japan and a variety of other locales, Eaves-Egenes explores the importance of natural darkness for diverse ecosystems – and her own health – as she reminds readers that, even though we’re collectively turning on too many lights, natural darkness is still our shared home' -- <B>Leigh Ann Henion, <I>New York Times</I> bestselling author of <I>Night Magic</I></B>