![]() ![]() ![]() “That’s ridiculous,” Jack thinks, “Ma was never in Outside.” It’s a telling moment, both because of the limits of the boy’s imagination and the precociousness of his thinking, his ability to conceptualize the world (such as it is) around him and give it an interpretation all his own. With Jack, however, the question of confinement becomes more nuanced, since he has no experience of “Outside.” Early in the novel, Ma tries to explain “There’s more things on earth than you ever dreamed about,” she says. And yet, like Sebold, Donoghue has other aspirations than merely to see if she can pull it off.Īpparently inspired by the experiences of Elisabeth Fritzl and Jaycee Dugard - both of whom were held for many years by captors (in Fritzl’s case, her father) by whom they bore children - she has said that to frame this story through a mother’s eyes “would be too obviously sad.” Of course, it is a gimmick to have a 5-year-old narrate a novel, just as it was for Alice Sebold to write “The Lovely Bones” from the perspective of a 14-year-old girl who had been raped and killed. Push too far in one direction and it becomes a gimmick, too far in the other and it grows obscure. ![]() As to why this is important, “Room” depends entirely on voice to be successful, and voice is a fragile thing. ![]()
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