Where to Start with Werewolves: Super Blood Wolf Moon Edition!

By Amanda Pagan, Children's Librarian
January 18, 2019
Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library (SNFL)
Blood Moon

Since ancient times, full moons have been regarded as omens of supernatural phenomenon, and it isn’t hard to see why. After all, if you saw your silver moon slowly turn red without knowing what a lunar eclipse was, you might think the world was about to end!

Luckily we know now lunar eclipses, which occur when the moon passes into the Earth’s shadow, appear red because of the dispersed sunlight coming from the Earth. While they are commonly referred to as blood moons due to their color, they do not have anything to do with blood or magic. Not that that makes them any less cool!

Occasionally, we are able to witness a fantastic phenomenon called a Super Blood Wolf Moon! This refers to a time when a lunar eclipse (a blood moon) occurs when the moon’s phase is at its closest point to Earth (a supermoon). In North America, the first full moon in January is known as the Wolf Moon, hence the epic name: Super Wolf Blood Moon!

Now with a name that fantastic, we’ve put together a list of recommendations based on, you guessed it, our favorite supernatural wolf-creature: the werewolf! After all, full moons are their time to shine.

The Wolf Man poster

While legends of shapeshifters and werewolves, or lycanthropes, exist in cultures all over the world, the werewolf, a human who can take on the form of a wolf under the light of a full moon, as we know it today came into the public consciousness as a result of the release of Universal’s The Wolf Man (1941), starring Lon Chaney Jr. as the title creature. After being bitten by a werewolf, the protagonist becomes a werewolf himself when the full moon shines.

Ever since, the werewolf has become a staple of the horror genre in the same vein as vampires. The differences between the two creatures are too vast to cover here, but they have commonly been portrayed as mortal enemies in media such as Len Wiseman’s Underworld (2003) film series.

The lore surrounding werewolves seems to change depending on the needs of a particular narrative as well as the source material the narrative is being drawn from. For instance, "Bisclavret" ("The Werewolf"), one of the twelve Lais of Marie de France, is one of the earliest werewolf stories. In "Bisclavret," the werewolf transforms back into a human by putting on his human clothes, which is extremely different from modern werewolves whose transformations are uncontrollable.

There are some things about werewolves that stay consistent: the fact that they transform into wolves or wolf/human hybrids, their allergy to silver/silver bullets, and their constant battle to maintain control over the beast within.

In honor of the Super Blood Wolf Moon, let’s take a look at some of our favorite werewolf stories!

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Staff picks are chosen by NYPL staff members and are not intended to be comprehensive lists. We'd love to hear your ideas too, so leave a comment and tell us what you’d recommend. And check out our Staff Picks browse tool for more recommendations!

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Book descriptions taken from NYPL catalog unless otherwise noted.