Good Morning, Midnight (Brooks-Dalton novel): Difference between revisions
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{{about||the 1939 novel by Jean Rhys|Good Morning, Midnight (Rhys novel)|the 2004 novel by Reginald Hill|Good Morning, Midnight (Hill novel)}} |
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{{infobox book |
{{infobox book |
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| name = Good Morning, Midnight |
| name = Good Morning, Midnight |
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| caption = First edition |
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| author = [[Lily Brooks-Dalton]] |
| author = [[Lily Brooks-Dalton]] |
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'''''Good Morning, Midnight''''' is the debut novel of [[Lily Brooks-Dalton]].<ref name=IrishIndependent2016-08-15/> |
'''''Good Morning, Midnight''''' is the debut novel of [[Lily Brooks-Dalton]].<ref name=IrishIndependent2016-08-15/> It was published in 2016 by [[Random House]].<ref name=Wapo2016-08-16/> |
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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]]. |
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In an interview with the ''[[Chicago Review of Books]]'' Brooks-Dalton explained that one of her inspirations was exploring gender roles in parenthood and the differences between how men and women feel guilt over the abandonment of their children.<ref name=chireviewofbooks2016-08-17/> |
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Actor-director [[George Clooney]] |
Actor-director [[George Clooney]] directed and acted in a 2020 film adaptation, entitled ''[[The Midnight Sky]]''. |
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According to website ''[[The Dream Cage]]'' the novel met with critical acclaim.<ref name="thedreamcageGMMidnight" /> |
According to website ''[[The Dream Cage]]'' the novel met with critical acclaim.<ref name="thedreamcageGMMidnight" /> |
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== |
== Plot summary == |
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''Good Morning, Midnight''’s [[Narration|narrative voice]] alternates between two main characters and ambiences. |
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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 others is Sullivan, one of the astronauts aboard the Aether, a [[Space station]] that's returning from an expedition to [[Jupiter]]. |
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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. |
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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. |
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Meanwhile, the astronauts on Aether also lose communication with Mission Control and are frightened and anxious with the fact that the entire planet has suddenly gone silent. There are six other astronauts aboard besides Sullivan: Devi, Harper, Thebes, Ivanov, and Tal. |
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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. |
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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. |
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By sheer accident, he finally manages to make contact with the Aether. He explains the planet's situation to Sullivan, leaving the astronauts wondering what to do. |
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In an ironic coincidence, it's revealed on the last page that Augustine is Sullivan's biological father and the astronaut is the daughter he abandoned in the past. |
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Sullivan is the girl's last name; her first name is precisely Iris, making the little girl in the Arctic a hallucination of the old astronomer. |
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== Background == |
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In a 2016 interview, Brooks-Dalton explained where the idea for the book came from: |
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<blockquote>I was working at a radio station when I thought of the initial idea. It was in the northeast, and when we had lots of snow someone had to be responsible for periodically going outside and knocking the snow off the transmitter, otherwise it would muffle the signal and we would go off the air. That image, of someone all alone in an empty radio station, keeping the signal alive, stuck with me. Eventually it became this book. <ref name=theqwillery2016-08-09/></blockquote> |
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In another interview with the ''[[Chicago Review of Books]]'', Brooks-Dalton explained that one of her inspirations was exploring gender roles in parenthood and the differences between how men and women feel guilt over the abandonment of their children: |
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<blockquote>The expectations of what women should value and what they are responsible for have permeated our culture for so long that it makes me wonder: if we all woke up in a totally different society tomorrow, would these gender disparities still exist? And how long would it take for those stigmas to fade? A decade? A generation? <ref name="chireviewofbooks2016-08-17"/></blockquote> |
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In addition to the narrative interspersed between post-apocalyptic Earth and the space station, certain parts of ''Good Morning, Midnight'' also go back in time to tell the past of Augustine and Sullivan. |
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He was a boy with a traumatic childhood who became a womanizer as an adult and dedicated himself exclusively to the [[Cosmos]]. Augustine abandoned the love of his life when she became pregnant, and never bothered to keep in touch with her or the daughter. |
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Sullivan represents the other side of the coin: the astronaut grew up with an absent, divorced mother who only thought about work. Married a second time, the mother began to focus more on the children with her new husband than on Sully. |
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Brooks-Dalton never bothered to explain the nature of the disaster that silences the Earth in her book. In a 2016 interview, she justified her choice: |
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<blockquote>For me and for this story specifically, the minutia of whether humanity falls by way of epidemic or warfare or asteroid or climate change was so much less interesting than what happens after. I wanted to keep the focus on the characters, to detail the emotional and psychological toll of such a catastrophe without dropping into the mechanics of how the world might continue in the wake of it. I was most interested in the individual issues, as opposed to the social. There are lots of fantastic post-apocalyptic books that delve into social issues — I wanted to write something with a different focus.<ref name=theqwillery2016-08-09/></blockquote>Furthermore, unlike the [[film adaptation]] released four years later, in the end Augustine and Sullivan never discover they are father and daughter. |
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About this decision to keep the characters' identities a secret shared only with readers, the author explained: |
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<blockquote>In the first draft I think they did figure it out — maybe not both of them, but I think Augustine at least knew. My agent questioned that, and as soon as she did I realized that it was totally unnecessary. It's not important that they know; it's important that they begin to make different choices. That they find their own paths to redemption. In the end, they don't need each other to do that, but I loved the idea of this bigger-than-them moment in which they do finally have this one chance to intersect, and yet the mystery remains. <ref name=bookclubbabble/></blockquote> |
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== Adaptation == |
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Actor-director [[George Clooney]] acquired the movie rights to the novel in June 2019.<ref name=variety2019-06-24/> Clooney directed and acted in the adaptation, entitled ''[[The Midnight Sky]]''. [[Mark L. Smith]], screenwriter for ''[[The Revenant (2015 film)|The Revenant]]'', wrote the screenplay.<ref name="deadline2019-06-24" /> |
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''The Midnight Sky'' has several differences from the book.<ref name=medium_baos/> |
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The plot now takes place in 2049 and Augustine (played by Clooney himself) has a terminal illness that forces him to undergo hemodialysis sessions. |
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The astronomer has been able to communicate with Aether since the beginning of the story, but the contact between them is cut off by distance. That's what forces Augustine to take a journey to another distant station with more modern radio equipment. |
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Unlike the book, the space mission is returning from an expedition to Jupiter that aimed to investigate conditions for humanity to colonize one of the planet's moons. |
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Sullivan (played by [[Felicity Jones]]) has a relationship with the captain of the space mission and is pregnant with him – a last-minute addition to the plot after the actress became pregnant in real life.<ref name="hollywoodreporter2020-10-30" /> |
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In the end, also unlike the book, Augustine reveals to the astronauts that the world was destroyed by a toxic cloud and became uninhabitable. |
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Two of them decide to return to Earth anyway to find out what happened to their families, while Sullivan and her companion decide to change course back to Jupiter and restart civilization on a new planet. |
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== References == |
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{{reflist|refs= |
{{reflist|refs= |
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<ref name=deadline2019-06-24> |
<ref name=deadline2019-06-24> |
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| url = https://deadline.com/2019/06/george-clooney-good-morning-midnight-mark-l-smith-movie-netflix-1202636253/ |
| url = https://deadline.com/2019/06/george-clooney-good-morning-midnight-mark-l-smith-movie-netflix-1202636253/ |
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| title = George Clooney To Direct & Star In Film Adaptation Of ‘Good Morning, Midnight’ Novel For Netflix |
| title = George Clooney To Direct & Star In Film Adaptation Of ‘Good Morning, Midnight’ Novel For Netflix |
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| work = [[Deadline |
| work = [[Deadline Hollywood]] |
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| first = Amanda |
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| last = N'Duka |
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| date = 2019-06-24 |
| date = 2019-06-24 |
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| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20201108001423/https://deadline.com/2019/06/george-clooney-good-morning-midnight-mark-l-smith-movie-netflix-1202636253/ |
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| archive-date= 2020-11-08 |
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| access-date = 2021-01-31 |
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| url-status = live |
| url-status = live |
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| quote = The streamer said Monday that two-time Oscar winner George Clooney is attached to direct and star in a feature based on Lily Brooks-Dalton’s 2016 novel Good Morning, Midnight, which was adapted for screen by The Revenant scribe Mark L. Smith. |
| quote = The streamer said Monday that two-time Oscar winner George Clooney is attached to direct and star in a feature based on Lily Brooks-Dalton’s 2016 novel Good Morning, Midnight, which was adapted for screen by The Revenant scribe Mark L. Smith. |
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}} |
}} |
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</ref> |
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<ref name=bookclubbabble> |
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{{cite web |
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| url = https://bookclubbabble.com/good-morning-midnight-an-interview-with-lily-brooks-dalton/ |
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| title = ‘Good Morning, Midnight’ – An Interview with Lily Brooks-Dalton |
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| work = [[Book Club Babble]] |
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| first = Tabitha |
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| last = Lord |
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| access-date = 2021-05-05 |
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| url-status = live}} |
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| access-date = 2021-01-04 |
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| quote = Brooks-Dalton’s novel was met with critical acclaim and was named one of the best books of the year by Shelf Awareness and the Chicago Review of Books. The film will begin production in October. |
| quote = Brooks-Dalton’s novel was met with critical acclaim and was named one of the best books of the year by Shelf Awareness and the Chicago Review of Books. The film will begin production in October. |
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| title = ‘Good Morning, Midnight’ Imagines the World Gone Dark |
| title = ‘Good Morning, Midnight’ Imagines the World Gone Dark |
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| work = [[Chicago Review of Books]] |
| work = [[Chicago Review of Books]] |
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| first = Sara |
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| last = Cutaia |
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| date = 2016-08-17 |
| date = 2016-08-17 |
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| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200923151027/https://chireviewofbooks.com/2016/08/17/good-morning-midnight-imagines-the-world-gone-dark/ |
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| archive-date= 2020-09-23 |
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| access-date = 2021-05-05 |
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| url-status = live |
| url-status = live |
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| quote = The expectations of what women should value and what they are responsible for have permeated our culture for so long that it makes me wonder: if we all woke up in a totally different society tomorrow, would these gender disparities still exist? And how long would it take for those stigmas to fade? A decade? A generation? |
| quote = The expectations of what women should value and what they are responsible for have permeated our culture for so long that it makes me wonder: if we all woke up in a totally different society tomorrow, would these gender disparities still exist? And how long would it take for those stigmas to fade? A decade? A generation? |
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}} |
}} |
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</ref> |
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<ref name=medium_baos> |
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{{cite news |
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| url = https://baos.pub/from-book-to-film-good-morning-midnight-and-the-midnight-sky-849380b0d9c4/ |
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| title = From Book to Film: ‘Good Morning, Midnight’ and ‘The Midnight Sky’ |
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| work = [[Medium (website)|Medium]] |
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| first = Felipe M. |
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| last = Guerra |
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| date = 2021-08-11 |
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| access-date = 2021-08-11 |
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| url-status = live}} |
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</ref> |
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<ref name=hollywoodreporter2020-10-30> |
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{{cite news |
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| url = https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/felicity-jones-on-shooting-midnight-sky-while-pregnant-hanging-with-rbg-and-her-future-in-the-star-wars-universe-4080675/ |
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| title = Felicity Jones on Shooting ‘Midnight Sky’ While Pregnant, Hanging With RBG and Her Future in the ‘Star Wars’ Universe |
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| work = [[The Hollywood Reporter]] |
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| first = Tatiana |
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| last = Siegel |
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| date = 2020-10-30 |
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| access-date = 2021-08-11 |
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| url-status = live}} |
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</ref> |
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| url = https://variety.com/2019/film/news/george-clooney-netflix-movie-lily-brooks-dalton-novel-1203251704/ |
| url = https://variety.com/2019/film/news/george-clooney-netflix-movie-lily-brooks-dalton-novel-1203251704/ |
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| title = George Clooney to Direct, Star in ‘Good Morning, Midnight’ Adaptation for Netflix |
| title = George Clooney to Direct, Star in ‘Good Morning, Midnight’ Adaptation for Netflix |
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| work = [[Variety magazine]] |
| work = [[Variety (magazine)|Variety]] |
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| first = Justin |
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| last = Kroll |
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| date = 2019-06-24 |
| date = 2019-06-24 |
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| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200907105246/https://variety.com/2019/film/news/george-clooney-netflix-movie-lily-brooks-dalton-novel-1203251704/ |
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| archive-date= 2020-09-07 |
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| access-date = 2021-01-04 |
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| url = https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/good-morning-midnight-and-other-best-new-science-fiction-and-fantasy/2016/08/16/6a170990-6092-11e6-9d2f-b1a3564181a1_story.html |
| url = https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/good-morning-midnight-and-other-best-new-science-fiction-and-fantasy/2016/08/16/6a170990-6092-11e6-9d2f-b1a3564181a1_story.html |
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| title = ‘Good Morning, Midnight’ and other best new science fiction and fantasy |
| title = ‘Good Morning, Midnight’ and other best new science fiction and fantasy |
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| first = Nancy |
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| last = Hightower |
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| date = 2016-08-16 |
| date = 2016-08-16 |
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| language = en-US |
| language = en-US |
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| work = [[Washington Post]] |
| work = [[The Washington Post]] |
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| access-date = |
| access-date = 2020-12-02 |
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| issn = 0190-8286 |
| issn = 0190-8286 |
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| url-status = live |
| url-status = live |
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| archive-date= 2021-01-01 |
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| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210101103317/https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/good-morning-midnight-and-other-best-new-science-fiction-and-fantasy/2016/08/16/6a170990-6092-11e6-9d2f-b1a3564181a1_story.html |
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}} |
}} |
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</ref> |
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<ref name=theqwillery2016-08-09> |
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{{cite news |
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| url = https://www.theqwillery.com/2016/08/interview-with-lily-brooks-dalton.html/ |
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| title = Interview with Lily Brooks-Dalton |
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| work = [[The Qwillery]] |
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| date = 2016-08-09 |
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| access-date = 2021-05-05 |
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| url-status = live}} |
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</ref> |
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| url = https://independent.ie/life/new-fiction-good-morning-midnight-by-lily-brooks-dalton-34960829.html |
| url = https://independent.ie/life/new-fiction-good-morning-midnight-by-lily-brooks-dalton-34960829.html |
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| title = New Fiction: Good Morning, Midnight by Lily Brooks-Dalton |
| title = New Fiction: Good Morning, Midnight by Lily Brooks-Dalton |
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| journal = [[Irish Independent]] |
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| first = Eilis |
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| last = O'Hanlon |
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| author-link = Eilis O'Hanlon |
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| date = 2016-08-15 |
| date = 2016-08-15 |
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| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210104155638/https://www.independent.ie/life/new-fiction-good-morning-midnight-by-lily-brooks-dalton-34960829.html |
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| archive-date= 2021-01-04 |
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| access-date = 2021-05-05 |
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| url-status = live |
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| quote = Good Morning, Midnight is strong on mood, whether it's the bleak, snowy outreaches of the Arctic or the surreal, sterile atmosphere on board the spaceship. |
| quote = Good Morning, Midnight is strong on mood, whether it's the bleak, snowy outreaches of the Arctic or the surreal, sterile atmosphere on board the spaceship. |
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[[Category:2016 novels]] |
[[Category:2016 debut novels]] |
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[[Category:2016 American novels]] |
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[[Category:2016 science fiction novels]] |
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[[Category:American science fiction novels]] |
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[[Category:Fiction set on Jupiter]] |
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[[Category:Space exploration novels]] |
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Revision as of 22:03, 13 December 2021
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: This article needs a good copy-editing runthrough. (August 2021) |
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.
Actor-director George Clooney directed and acted in a 2020 film adaptation, entitled The Midnight Sky.
According to website The Dream Cage the novel met with critical acclaim.[3]
Plot summary
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 others is Sullivan, one of the astronauts aboard the Aether, a Space station that's 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 with the fact that the entire planet has suddenly gone silent. There are six 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 finally manages to make contact with the Aether. He explains the planet's situation to Sullivan, leaving the astronauts wondering what to do.
In an ironic coincidence, it's revealed on the last page that Augustine is Sullivan's biological father and the astronaut is the daughter he abandoned in the past.
Sullivan is the girl's last name; her first name is precisely Iris, making the little girl in the Arctic a hallucination of the old astronomer.
Background
In a 2016 interview, Brooks-Dalton explained where the idea for the book came from:
I was working at a radio station when I thought of the initial idea. It was in the northeast, and when we had lots of snow someone had to be responsible for periodically going outside and knocking the snow off the transmitter, otherwise it would muffle the signal and we would go off the air. That image, of someone all alone in an empty radio station, keeping the signal alive, stuck with me. Eventually it became this book. [4]
In another interview with the Chicago Review of Books, Brooks-Dalton explained that one of her inspirations was exploring gender roles in parenthood and the differences between how men and women feel guilt over the abandonment of their children:
The expectations of what women should value and what they are responsible for have permeated our culture for so long that it makes me wonder: if we all woke up in a totally different society tomorrow, would these gender disparities still exist? And how long would it take for those stigmas to fade? A decade? A generation? [5]
In addition to the narrative interspersed between post-apocalyptic Earth and the space station, certain parts of Good Morning, Midnight also go back in time to tell the past of Augustine and Sullivan.
He was a boy with a traumatic childhood who became a womanizer as an adult and dedicated himself exclusively to the Cosmos. Augustine abandoned the love of his life when she became pregnant, and never bothered to keep in touch with her or the daughter.
Sullivan represents the other side of the coin: the astronaut grew up with an absent, divorced mother who only thought about work. Married a second time, the mother began to focus more on the children with her new husband than on Sully.
Brooks-Dalton never bothered to explain the nature of the disaster that silences the Earth in her book. In a 2016 interview, she justified her choice:
For me and for this story specifically, the minutia of whether humanity falls by way of epidemic or warfare or asteroid or climate change was so much less interesting than what happens after. I wanted to keep the focus on the characters, to detail the emotional and psychological toll of such a catastrophe without dropping into the mechanics of how the world might continue in the wake of it. I was most interested in the individual issues, as opposed to the social. There are lots of fantastic post-apocalyptic books that delve into social issues — I wanted to write something with a different focus.[4]
Furthermore, unlike the film adaptation released four years later, in the end Augustine and Sullivan never discover they are father and daughter.
About this decision to keep the characters' identities a secret shared only with readers, the author explained:
In the first draft I think they did figure it out — maybe not both of them, but I think Augustine at least knew. My agent questioned that, and as soon as she did I realized that it was totally unnecessary. It's not important that they know; it's important that they begin to make different choices. That they find their own paths to redemption. In the end, they don't need each other to do that, but I loved the idea of this bigger-than-them moment in which they do finally have this one chance to intersect, and yet the mystery remains. [6]
Adaptation
Actor-director George Clooney acquired the movie rights to the novel in June 2019.[7] Clooney directed and acted in the adaptation, entitled The Midnight Sky. Mark L. Smith, screenwriter for The Revenant, wrote the screenplay.[8]
The Midnight Sky has several differences from the book.[9]
The plot now takes place in 2049 and Augustine (played by Clooney himself) has a terminal illness that forces him to undergo hemodialysis sessions.
The astronomer has been able to communicate with Aether since the beginning of the story, but the contact between them is cut off by distance. That's what forces Augustine to take a journey to another distant station with more modern radio equipment.
Unlike the book, the space mission is returning from an expedition to Jupiter that aimed to investigate conditions for humanity to colonize one of the planet's moons.
Sullivan (played by Felicity Jones) has a relationship with the captain of the space mission and is pregnant with him – a last-minute addition to the plot after the actress became pregnant in real life.[10]
In the end, also unlike the book, Augustine reveals to the astronauts that the world was destroyed by a toxic cloud and became uninhabitable.
Two of them decide to return to Earth anyway to find out what happened to their families, while Sullivan and her companion decide to change course back to Jupiter and restart civilization on a new planet.
References
- ^
O'Hanlon, Eilis (2016-08-15). "New Fiction: Good Morning, Midnight by Lily Brooks-Dalton". Irish Independent. Archived from the original on 2021-01-04. Retrieved 2021-05-05.
Good Morning, Midnight is strong on mood, whether it's the bleak, snowy outreaches of the Arctic or the surreal, sterile atmosphere on board the spaceship.
- ^ Hightower, Nancy (2016-08-16). "'Good Morning, Midnight' and other best new science fiction and fantasy". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Archived from the original on 2021-01-01. Retrieved 2020-12-02.
- ^
"FILM - GOOD MORNING, MIDNIGHT". The Dream Cage. Retrieved 2021-01-04.
Brooks-Dalton’s novel was met with critical acclaim and was named one of the best books of the year by Shelf Awareness and the Chicago Review of Books. The film will begin production in October.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b
"Interview with Lily Brooks-Dalton". The Qwillery. 2016-08-09. Retrieved 2021-05-05.
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Cutaia, Sara (2016-08-17). "'Good Morning, Midnight' Imagines the World Gone Dark". Chicago Review of Books. Archived from the original on 2020-09-23. Retrieved 2021-05-05.
The expectations of what women should value and what they are responsible for have permeated our culture for so long that it makes me wonder: if we all woke up in a totally different society tomorrow, would these gender disparities still exist? And how long would it take for those stigmas to fade? A decade? A generation?
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Lord, Tabitha. "'Good Morning, Midnight' – An Interview with Lily Brooks-Dalton". Book Club Babble. Retrieved 2021-05-05.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Kroll, Justin (2019-06-24). "George Clooney to Direct, Star in 'Good Morning, Midnight' Adaptation for Netflix". Variety. Archived from the original on 2020-09-07. Retrieved 2021-01-04.
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N'Duka, Amanda (2019-06-24). "George Clooney To Direct & Star In Film Adaptation Of 'Good Morning, Midnight' Novel For Netflix". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on 2020-11-08. Retrieved 2021-01-31.
The streamer said Monday that two-time Oscar winner George Clooney is attached to direct and star in a feature based on Lily Brooks-Dalton’s 2016 novel Good Morning, Midnight, which was adapted for screen by The Revenant scribe Mark L. Smith.
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Guerra, Felipe M. (2021-08-11). "From Book to Film: 'Good Morning, Midnight' and 'The Midnight Sky'". Medium. Retrieved 2021-08-11.
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Siegel, Tatiana (2020-10-30). "Felicity Jones on Shooting 'Midnight Sky' While Pregnant, Hanging With RBG and Her Future in the 'Star Wars' Universe". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2021-08-11.
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