The Copper Moon
Every story has its own heartbeat. A symbol that threads quietly through the pages, revealing itself only when you look closely enough. For me, that symbol is the Copper Moon. It’s a moment suspended in time, where light and shadow meet, and where everything—love, loss, and destiny—collides. I felt this would be an intriguing element to weave into The Book of Eternity, because it embodies so much of what the story explores.
The Copper Moon is a rare and haunting celestial event. It has long been seen as a symbol of transformation, balance, and awakening. A fragile line between light and darkness, heaven and earth, mortal and divine.
The Copper Moon felt like the perfect embodiment of that idea. I felt this would be an intriguing element to weave into The Book of Eternity, because it holds so much of what the story explores. It represents the instant when worlds touch, when something supernatural stirs in the shadows of the ordinary. Under its glow, truths surface, hearts are tested, and fates begin to shift. It is rare, beautiful, and unsettling. The stillness before everything changes.
In ancient lore, the Copper Moon appears only when the veil between worlds thins. When angels remember what they once were, and mortals’ glimpse what they were never meant to see. It isn’t a sign of destruction, but of becoming. A bridge between what was and what must be.
Because copper is both a conductor and a purifier, its light connects and cleanses. It unites opposing forces such as love and danger, creation and loss, beauty, and ruin.
In The Book of Eternity, the Copper Moon marks the moment when heaven and hell, human and divine, are bound together by something neither can control. It is a moon of reckoning and renewal, a haunting reminder that even in darkness, there is still light … and that love can exist in the space between both.

