The Room (novel) explained

The Room
Release Date:1971
Author:Hubert Selby Jr.
Genre:Modern tragedy, stream of consciousness
Country:United States
Language:English
Publisher:Grove Press
Pages:288
Media Type:Print
Preceded By:Last Exit to Brooklyn
Followed By:The Demon

The Room is the second novel by Hubert Selby Jr., first published in 1971.

Plot

The novel centers on a nameless petty criminal locked in a remand cell awaiting trial for a crime only vaguely defined. As the novel progresses the man surrenders himself to self-pity and hatred, constructing elaborate fantasies of revenge and the torture he wishes to inflict on the officers who, he believes, falsely arrested him.

Reception

Selby described the critical reception of the book as "the greatest reviews I've ever read in my life", although in reality it was not well received.[1] [2] The novel was regarded by Selby as the most disturbing book ever written, and Selby stated that he himself was unable to read it again for 20 years. At least one reviewer has expressed similar feelings, with claims that reading the novel made him physically sick.[3] It has been described as "a terrifying journey into the darkest corners of the psyche."[4]

In popular culture

A section of The Room is used in Richard Linklater's Waking Life, where a red-faced man in a jail cell describes in vivid detail the abuse he intends to inflict once he is released.[5]

The 2008 death metal track "Beg, You Dogs" by the band Benediction is based on the book.

Notes and References

  1. "World on the fringes of writer Selby", BBC
  2. Guttridge, Peter (2004) "Obituaries: Hubert Selby Jnr", The Independent
  3. Mitchell, Chris "Hubert Selby: The Movie and The Room", Splinter Magazine
  4. O'Neill, Tony (2007) "A genuinely frightening American Psycho", The Guardian
  5. Selby Hubert (1971) The Room