Room Temperature (novel) explained

Room Temperature
Author:Nicholson Baker
Country:United States
Language:English
Publisher:Grove Press
Release Date:April 1990
Media Type:Print (hardback & paperback)
Pages:128
Isbn:0-8021-1224-2
Dewey:813/.54 20
Congress:PS3552.A4325 R6 1990
Oclc:20933938

Room Temperature is Nicholson Baker's second book, and continues the genre established in his first novel The Mezzanine, though this time the action spans a few minutes at the narrator's home (in Quincy, Massachusetts).

Mike is feeding his baby daughter, "the Bug", as her head rests in the crook of his arm. He blows in the direction of a mobile; twenty seconds and two dozen pages later, he is surprised to see the mobile move. Mike's thoughts wander as he contemplates, for example, the possibility of admitting to one's wife that one has been picking one's nose, or the juxtaposition of Debussy and Skippy peanut butter jars in a symphonic poem. The novel was received warmly but without great enthusiasm, as an enjoyable if slightly demure domestic follow-up to The Mezzanine.

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