The Girl Who Drank The Moon is fantasy novel about a magical land and a young girl named Luna who is unaware of her growing powers from drinking moonlight as a baby. Students of all ages will enjoy this beautifully told, thrilling, and magical journey with themes of kindness and cruelty, hope and despair, and the importance of love above all else.
Students can track the different themes, symbols and motifs present in the novel and create a spider map that labels, defines and illustrates them.
Storyboard Text
THE BOG
FEAR AND CONTROL
FOG, CLOUDS, SUNSHINE
The Bog is a symbol of creation. It is the origin of all life and also where one goes when their life has ended. Glerk says, "In the beginning, there was the Bog. And the Bog covered the world and the Bog was the world and the world was the Bog."
The villagers of the Protectorate are so scared of the witch that they are willing to sacrifice one of their own every year in order to save the village. "Sacrifice one or sacrifice all. That is the way of the world. We couldn't change it if we tried." In this way, the Elders and Sister Ignatia control people by keeping them in a constant state of fear.
The Protectorate is continuously cloudy, grey, and dark. The citizens are full of sorrow and feel hopeless. They don't realize that their despair is beneficial to the Elders and Sister Ignatia, who do everything in their power to keep citizens bereft of hope and joy. When Antain and Ethyne marry and are about to have a child, their hopefulness starts to bring sunshine and light to the Protectorate.
THE GIRL WHO DRANK THE MOONThemes, Symbols, and Motifs