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Latest Review: "The Room" by Jonas Karlsson

The latest addition to our Reviews section is a piece by Peter Biello on The Room by Jonas Karlsson, translated by Neil Smith and out from Hogarth.

Peter Biello is the host of All Things Considered at New Hampshire Public Radio. He has served as a producer/announcer/host of Weekend Edition Saturday at Vermont Public Radio and as a reporter/host of Morning Edition at WHQR in Wilmington, North Carolina.

Here’s the beginning of Peter’s review:

If you鈥檝e ever worked in a corporate office, you鈥檝e likely heard the phrase, 鈥淧erception is reality.鈥 To Bj枚rn, the office worker who narrates Jonas Karlsson鈥檚 novel The Room, the reality is simple: there鈥檚 a door near the bathroom that leads to a tidy little room with a desk. Inside this room, he feels a profound sense of peace. The problem is that Bj枚rn is the only one in the office who can see the room.

Bj枚rn is a new employee at 鈥渢he Authority鈥 at the start of the novel. He describes himself as ambitious and smart, but within a matter of pages, it becomes clear that he鈥檚 unreliable. He reprimands a co-worker for allowing the files on his desk to spill onto Bj枚rn鈥檚, an obvious overreaction. We begin to realize that the whole office is concerned about Bj枚rn鈥檚 strange behavior when the manager, Karl, sends an email to the entire staff that says: 鈥淲e will be putting staffing issues under a microscope.鈥

What follows Karl鈥檚 email is the revelation that Bj枚rn sees a room nobody else can, and that, while Bj枚rn thinks he is inside the room, he is actually staring at the wall. Karl and the staff confront him about this behavior, but Bj枚rn, so convinced of his own reality, insists that everyone else is delusional or conspiring against him.

For the rest of the review, go here.



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