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booklistqueen 's review for:
Room
by Emma Donoghue
dark
hopeful
tense
medium-paced
Five-year-old Jack has lived his whole life in Room. It's his whole world where he lives with his Ma all day long. At night, Ma shuts him up in the wardrobe for protection when Old Nick visits. What Jack doesn't realize is that his mother doesn't view Room as home, but as a prison where she is being held captive. Narrated from Jack's perspective, Room hauntingly narrates unimaginable horrors witnessed through the innocence of a child.
Reading Room, I was still struck by the power of narration through the eyes of a child. The story is split into three parts: the captivity, the escape, and the transition into the world. While the horrors of the premise are unimaginable, the story doesn't dwell on them, else it would be extremely difficult to read. Instead, Donoghue's core message is about the transition, watching your entire world come apart, quite literally and learning to live in the aftermath.