Room: A Novel by Emma Donoghue (Epub)

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    Ebook Info

    • Published:
    • Number of pages:
    • Format: Epub
    • File Size: 0.43 MB
    • Authors: Emma Donoghue

    Description

    Held captive for years in a small shed, a woman and her precocious young son finally gain their freedom, and the boy experiences the outside world for the first time. To five-year-old-Jack, Room is the world. . . . It’s where he was born, it’s where he and his Ma eat and sleep and play and learn. At night, his Ma shuts him safely in the wardrobe, where he is meant to be asleep when Old Nick visits. Room is home to Jack, but to Ma it’s the prison where she has been held for seven years. Through her fierce love for her son, she has created a life for him in this eleven-by-eleven-foot space. But with Jack’s curiosity building alongside her own desperation, she knows that Room cannot contain either much longer. Room is a tale at once shocking, riveting, exhilarating — a story of unconquerable love in harrowing circumstances, and of the diamond-hard bond between a mother and her child.

    User’s Reviews

    Editorial Reviews: About the Author Born in Dublin in 1969, Emma Donoghue is an Irish emigrant twice over: she spent eight years in Cambridge doing a PhD in eighteenth-century literature before moving to London, Ontario, where she lives with her partner and their two children. She also migrates between genres, writing literary history, biography, stage and radio plays as well as fairy tales and short stories. She is best known for her novels, which range from the historical (Frog Music, Slammerkin, Life Mask, Landing, The Sealed Letter) to the contemporary (Akin, Stir-Fry, Hood, Landing). Her international bestseller Room was a New York Times Best Book of 2010 and was a finalist for the Man Booker, Commonwealth, and Orange Prizes.

    Reviews from Amazon users which were colected at the time this book was published on the website:

    ⭐I went into this book knowing absolutely nothing about it, which is how I would recommended others to do when considering reading this book.This story is heavy, intense, and remarkable. It tells the story of 5 year old Jack and his Ma, who are trapped inside of an 11×11 ft room. It is told in Jack’s point of view, and how he is learning about the world outside, which he doesn’t believe is real.There is so much more detail that I could go into for a summary of this amazing novel, but I don’t want to give anything away. I read ROOM over a course of two days, staying up very late at night to finish the last couple of pages. ROOM is now my favorite book of all time, and if you are wanting to read an emotional rollercoaster of a novel that deals with a heavy topic, ROOM is definitely the one for youWARNINGS: This book deals with kidnapping, sexual assault, and depression. Foul language and mature themes are explicitly used throughout this novel

    ⭐As of late, I’ve not been adding written reviews to the books I’ve read. Whether it’s from sheer laziness, or each book’s failure to inspire me to leave more than a “star” count, is beyond me.But every once in a while there comes a book that’s so breathtaking that I feel I have no choice but to shout it to the rooftops! This is one of those books.This book is brilliantly constructed. The story and the characters kept me riveted.The story is a difficult one, but our narrator-a five-year-old boy-tells it completely and with unflinching honesty. I was completely convinced I was hearing the story from an actual five-year-old boy! If this doesn’t impress you, I urge you to try to write a story from a young child’s perspective and in their own words.Good luck with that.Mrs. Donoghue is a rare talent in a world filled with mediocre authors and their books. The story is a true gem and one that will stay with me my entire life. The book is not so much about whether you can predict how it will end: It’s all about seeing the world from an age we can’t remember. This, in itself, is a gift.And speaking of gifts, Mrs. Donoghue has given those in spades when it comes to literature, which has been bereft of great storytellers for many decades.

    ⭐I could not get past the horrible command of the English Language for a 5 year old. She wrote this child as if he were a 2 year old who’s vocabulary was just in its infancy. If Ma can speak coherently, he should be able to at his age. Impossible to stumble through this grammatical mess. It’s a reader’s nightmare.

    ⭐I had to ponder this review for a bit. This book came recommended to me from a dear friend and coworker of mine, but it came with a warning. She said that she had a hard time initially with how the book was written and thought I would as well, but just to stick with it because it gets easier.Boy am I glad I listened and I did. Initially I was so turned off by the writing from Jack’s perspective, and some of the topics he repetitively talked about, that I just about stopped reading the book. However, just as I was about to give up – the plot sucked me in and I was suddenly not bothered at all.Being someone who doesn’t want to ruin books for others who may read it later, I will say this about this book…it’s an awesome example of the Mother’s bond with a child and her personal perseverance through all she endured was inspiring.This book ran me through a wide range of emotions – laughing, crying, disgust, anger ( in the form of me screaming out on break at my work, No &$@!ing way!), and finally admiration.I felt personally invested in their lives and felt the tightness of their ROOM. That alone says to me that it’s a great book. The only reason that I didn’t give it five stars was because I wanted a little more, I wanted to know more of the ending for the main characters. I needed more then the final scene, I wanted justice to be given! The writer chose to end it the story the way she did, and I respect that. But… I still chose to withhold my 5th star! I still would highly recommend this book and I am so looking forward to checking out the movie!

    ⭐The story is told by Jack, a very intelligent, articulate five year old boy. Raised by his mother, who was kidnapped at nineteen, imprisoned in a small metal garden shed that had been made escape proof. She is at the mercy of her jailer for even the bare essentials of survival. She gives birth to Jack frightened and alone. Jack gives Ma, as he comes to call her, a reason to live, somebody to love. Their relationship is the heart of the story. An awesome story of a Mother’s love for her son. Jack grows believing the room is all there is. Beyond the room is outer space. When the man comes at night Jack retreats to the wardrobe, he always wakes up in his and Ma’s bed in the morning. Besides the bed and the wardrobe there is a toilet, bathtub, sink, refrigerator, stove, cupboard, a small TV with rabbit ears and poor picture, a small table and two chairs. The only door, a steel security door operated by a touch pad, the only window, a sky-light in the roof. There is no privacy, no escape. Each day when Ma believes the man is gone from the area they stand on the table screaming, hoping someone will hear. Each night Ma slips out of bed and using the light switch sends an SOS hoping maybe someone will see the light blinking through the sky-light and rescue them. When the man turns off the electricity leaving them without heat, lights or food to punish Ma, Jack’s tiny world becomes even more frightening. A novel I couldn’t put down.

    ⭐I put off reading this book for ages, in part was because I knew the narrator of the story is very young, just five in fact and I often struggle with child narrators. The other part is that it sounded way too miserable to put to the top of the list after all Jack and his Mum have been imprisoned in a room for his entire life…But, I was glued to the book, it was mother apart from limited one of those I couldn’t put aside and while Jack’s narration probably isn’t a true reflection of how any child, even one whose whole vocabulary comes from another adult, it was pitched at a level to remind us he is a child, at a level so that whilst the innocence shone through but without compromising the telling of a story.We get an idea of how Jack’s mum didn’t give up, she threw the whole of her energy into entertaining, nurturing and teaching Jack with limited resources, just five book and a TV for outside stimulation, everything else had to be invention on her part. There are physical education lessons which involve racing round the bed, all sixteen of Jack’s steps and using the bed to put on trampoline routines. She imposes strict routines for meals, for chores and for bedtime where Jack sleeps in the wardrobe to be out of sight if ‘Old Nick’ comes to visit. It is this, the sheer resilience of this young woman, only twenty-six at the point we enter the story, that prevents this from being a misery-fest and turns it into something quite special indeed.Because Jack’s life is so narrow it would be very easy for the story to be repetitive and as fun as his musings over Dora the Explorer and Barney are, I’m pleased to confirm that the story has far more to offer than I initially expected. Through Jack’s eyes, and ears, we get to see how the pair ended up in the room in the first place allowing the reader to plug the gaps which may not completely take away the horror of the story unfolding but makes it a tad more bearable than if this had been told by the mother.For me it was the latter chapters that had the most impact and gives rise to some of the important questions that perhaps aren’t easily answered. On Jack’s fifth birthday he is told by his mother that the life on the TV exists outside his room. There is far more than the slither of sky and moon he can see through the skylight if they stand on the table. The world is big, there are other people than the two he knows about and yet he struggles with the concept and questions things in a way a child born into a life which isn’t behind a locked door would never do.Heart-rending and yet uplifting, Room is one of those books I think I’ll struggle to forget, so mesmerising is the tale, so appealing is its narrator and so horrifying a premise to dwell upon, I now understand why this book caused the stir it did when it was published in 2010.

    ⭐A beautifully conceived and emotionally engaging novel.Told entirely from the perspective of a child, Donoghue takes a distressing, dark subject and turns it into a compelling, life-affirming tale; Jack’s innocence, obsession with numbers and lively imagination makes the captive existence he and his Ma endure bearable for them both. It’s established throughout the book that Jack is a bright child, his mother an intelligent, educated young woman; how they cope with life in the room and later outside in the real world is the whole substance of the novel; it`s a subtle study of how a mother/child relationship endures and adapts to extreme situations – and in that respect, it`s a deeply human story.The courage and fortitude shown by both characters as the events of the plot unfold is profoundly moving.It’s obvious of course, that if this had been told from Ma`s perspective it would have been a very different, far more harrowing (and conventional) story – we all know of real-life horrors this fictional story draws on; there’s a justifiable degree of contrivance to the whole enterprise, but that`s an acceptable aspect of the novel.I was surprised – not to say dismayed by the negative reviews the book has received on these pages – particularly from readers who couldn’t even make the effort to accept the language in which it is written; I feel most sorry for those who have tried to intellectualise arguments to justify their lack of engagement.I suppose some folk just lose the poetry and wonder of the world when they move into adulthood.Ignore the naysayers and read this book – accept it on it`s own terms – I was moved by it and I recommend it unreservedly; it`s an uplifting, rewarding read.

    ⭐Overlong, dull, boring… This might have worked as a novella, but dragged on far too long as a novel.Maybe it would have helped if the author had broken the sections of the story into smaller chapters – but I found myself thinking, “For goodness sake! – how much more of this until we get to the end of the chapter?”SPOILER ALERT COMING UP – FOR ANYONE WHO DOES WANT TO READ IT:First part – after one chapter, I got it. Young woman is obviously being imprisoned as a sex slave and is bringing up the child she had as a result in an environment where he knows nothing of the outside world. Got it now – don’t need any more boring, repetitive detail – so skipped to “escape”.Second part – woman & child now trying to adapt to life outside. Obviously, woman coping better, as she wanted to get back to normal life – child having difficulty coping with this “brave new world”. Did we have to dwell on the breast-feeding so much? Surely she would have worked out by now that this ISN’T normal? She was supposed to have been nineteen when incarcerated – she would have known that a 5-year-old shouldn’t still be having breast milk! (Would the breasts even continue producing that long? – Is it biologically possible? – I have no idea!) Skipped to end.End – nothing special. didn’t feel there was any kind of “wrap-up”.This book won awards – God knows why. Unless you have problems with insomnia and need to get something to send you off to sleep, please don’t waste your money…

    ⭐Read this for a book club. For me it dragged for the first 150 pages and (spoiler….) it only picked up at the escape. Even then I felt it was a chore to read it. The plot is simple. A woman is kidnapped, eventually bears the kidnapper a child, loves the child who with the mother exists for 5 years in the restrictive world of a small room. They escape eventually and the rest is related to how mother and child coped with the bustling outside world. Finally it winds up nicely to a satisfactory end. I would not have read this book club choice on my own, because at no point did I feel entertained or lost in the book. I’ve recently concluded though that I don’t enjoy books narrated by children.

    ⭐A very thoroughly researched, believable and disturbing story, made sweet and heartwarming by being told entirely by Jack – the five year old boy who knows no better life than the evil situation he was born in to. This storytelling technique must have been at least a little inspired by ‘The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time’. In this case, Jack does not have learning difficulties, but his naive and imperfect grasp of the English language, and strange upbringing, create a narrative which you will either find irritating or (in my case) bring back many memories of my childhood thought processes, plus more recent conversations with my nephews and friends’ kids. Having been fascinated by the recent film, I was keen to compare it with the original novel. As I hoped and expected – some events were simplified or merged to make a shorter screenplay, and the book contains more detail, but otherwise the story is identical.

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