Good Morning, Midnight (Brooks-Dalton novel)
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First edition | |
| Author | Lily Brooks-Dalton |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Random House |
Good Morning, Midnight is the debut novel of Lily Brooks-Dalton.[1] It was published in 2016 by Random House.[2]
Narrated in the present and in flashbacks, and following groups of characters in two different settings (the Arctic and outer space), the novel's plot is about an astronomer who may be the last human being on Earth after an unidentified disaster and the space mission that tries to return to the planet after a year without contact with Mission control center.
Both Shelf Awareness and the Chicago Review of Books included Good Morning, Midnight on their lists of the best novels of 2016.[3][4]
George Clooney directed and acted in a 2020 film adaptation, The Midnight Sky.
Good Morning, Midnight's narrative voice alternates between two main characters and ambiences.
One is Augustine, an astronomer in his late 70s who lives and works on Barbeau's Observatory, a research station in the Arctic Circle. The other is Sullivan, one of the astronauts aboard Aether, a space station returning from an expedition to Jupiter.
On Earth, rumors of an unexplained war begin to spread and Augustine's research facility is evacuated. He refuses to leave and remains in the frozen station hoping to die alone.
One year after the evacuation, Augustine has lost all connection with the outside world. At the same time, he discovers that a little girl named Iris has also been abandoned there, after a possible confusion during the evacuation.
Meanwhile, the astronauts on Aether also lose communication with Mission Control and are frightened and anxious as the entire planet has suddenly gone silent. There are five other astronauts aboard besides Sullivan: Devi, Harper, Thebes, Ivanov, and Tal.
Halfway through the story, Devi dies in an accident: her suit's breathing system fails while she and Sullivan make repairs to the space station's exterior.
Near the end of the book, Augustine and Iris take a near-suicide journey to another station farther away from their current one, where there's a more powerful radio antenna to try to communicate with the rest of the world.
By sheer accident, he makes contact with the Aether. He explains the planet's situation to Sullivan, leaving the astronauts wondering what to do.
The novel's last page reveals that astronaut Sullivan is the daughter Augustine abandoned in the past, and the little girl in the Arctic is his hallucination.