Tuesday, June 23, 2026

The City in the Middle of the Night: Charlie Jane Anders

My son read this book first. He liked it, with reservations. (More about that later.) The subject interested me, so I decided to read it also. It is science fiction, about life on a colonized planet, where half of the planet is perpetually cold and in the dark, and the other half is always in the light and hot. 

This summary is from the back of the edition I read:

Humanity clings to life on January–a colonized planet divided between permanently frozen darkness on one side, and blazing endless sunshine on the other.

Two cities, built long ago in the meager temperate zone, serve as the last bastions of civilization–but life inside them is just as dangerous as the uninhabitable wastelands outside.

Sophie, a young student from the wrong side of Xiosphant city, is exiled into the dark after being part of a failed revolution. But she survives–with the help of a mysterious savior from beneath the ice.


The story takes place thousands of years in the future. The planet of January was populated by humans from earth and many nations worked together to create the ship that carried the people to January. The cooperation between the nations was not entirely successful (not surprising) and resulted in problems in setting up the cities for the settlers. There are two point of view characters: Sophie and Mouth. Sophie's sections are told in 1st person narrative; Mouth's sections are in third person. 

Sophie is the primary character in the book. She and Bianca are students in a school in Xiosphant city, but Sophie is lower class and won her place at the school with her intelligence. Bianca is from a rich family and is spoiled and manipulative; they are close friends, and Sophie has a strong attachment to Bianca.

Mouth is the last surviving member of a nomadic group called the Citizens, and was traumatized by losing her community at such a very young age. She feels like it is her duty to preserve their heritage. These things drive a lot of her behavior and decisions. When the story opens, Mouth is traveling with another nomadic group named the Resourceful Couriers, who carry contraband between the two major cities.


My thoughts:

  • Overall, this was a good read. The pace was good, the story was good. It took me a good while to warm up to Mouth. Many of the characters were flawed, which is to be expected, but Sophie had a good heart to the end, so I hung on to find out how she weathered the vicissitudes she suffered. She and Mouth sort of balanced each other out.
  • There were so many characters (besides the three I have mentioned), and most of them were interesting, with their own agendas and flaws, but it was hard to keep track of all of them. And I could have used a map.
  • I think the book was too long although it was hard to say what could have been left out. The book was only 360 pages but I would have liked it to be closer to 300. But, this book has stuck in my mind since I finished it a month ago, and most books don't do that.
  • The story goes in a weird direction in the last 80 pages. Very weird, and it would be too much of a spoiler to talk about it here. There are hints of this ending as the story progresses, but still I was very surprised. I liked the turn of events and I liked the way it was handled.


I asked my son what his one sentence review of The City in the Middle of the Night would be. He said it was "a well written book that doesn't quite know what it wants to be." He also thought it was longer than it should be.


8 comments:

  1. You (and your son) have me intrigued with this book. I'm at least going to have to see what my options are for it.

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    1. Kelly, I found it to be an interesting read and I enjoyed trying to figure out what was going. I am not very experienced with science fiction so each new author and book is a new experience. I hope you can find I way to try this one out.

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  2. I quite like the sound of this, but then it would be my kind of thing! I will look it up.

    Quite a few books are too long these days. You'd think they were being paid by the word, like Dickens. I've just finished a so called, 'cosy fantasy': Miss Percy's Pocket Guide to 'something or other' Dragons (even the title's too long) by Quenby Olsen. About 420 pages ims, and full of waffle. To be honest, it wasn't a bad book, fun and interesting, but oh, too much waffle about what she's thinking in an attempt, I think to be funny or whimsical. You could cut 150 pages and be none the worse for it.

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    1. Cath, I enjoyed your thoughts on books that are too long. My ideal book is between 250 to 300 pages. Of course there are exceptions. I am in the middle of Middlemarch and it is 800 pages. It is challenging for me; I taking a break from it right now. But it has encouraged me to read some other long books I had been ignoring, such as The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova, which is on my husband's stack and which you liked a lot.

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  3. I do like stories that show a society through the eyes of the people who live in it, Tracy. I think that's an effective way for speculative fiction to make its points. And the characters here do sound interesting. I know what you mean about the editing, though...

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    1. Margot, that describes it very well. The main characters interpreted the problems with the society from their own biases, and that was interesting.

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  4. Hi Tracy, I am intrigued. A novel in which half the planet is very cold and dark and the other half where its light and very hot all the time. And a small section where people can actually survive and live. There are so many stories that could be written about this

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    1. You are right, Kathy, this situation could have been handled in many ways. It was interesting to see how this author addressed the effects of the extreme climates on the planet. And how the different backgrounds of the various characters shaped their responses.

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