Room

by

Emma Donoghue

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Room: After Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
At the police precinct, as Ma and Jack get out of the car, there are “lights quick quick like fireworks” all around. Officer Oh mutters “vultures” under her breath and attempts to shield Jack with a blanket, but Jack pushes her aside and looks at the people holding flashing machines.
The paparazzi have already arrived at the precinct by the time Ma and Jack get there, foreshadowing the far-reaching media attention their case will garner as the days and weeks go by.
Themes
Voyeurism and the Media Theme Icon
Quotes
Inside, Jack is overwhelmed by the bright lights and the people all around. He is mesmerized by the sight of a vending machine, but Ma pulls him through the lobby to a small room where a “huge wide man” is waiting for them. The man apologizes for the “media presence,” and thanks Jack for his courage, calling him a brave young man. Jack is confused at being called a “man,” and even more unsettled when the chair in the corner of the room doesn’t rock like Rocker did back in Room.
Though the precinct is an ordinary place filled with ordinary things like vending machines and chairs, Jack is mesmerized by all of it. He has escaped the isolation of Room—but remains isolated from an understanding of the larger world.
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The large man—the police captain—tells Ma that he needs to take a statement from her. After that, he says, she and Jack will be released to the Cumberland Clinic, a psychiatric care facility. Jack sits with Ma as she begins talking to the man, who calls her by her “other name.” Jack wants some, and tries to pull Ma’s t-shirt up, but she tells Jack she’s busy. Jack continues prodding her, though, and finally she lets him breastfeed. The captain asks if Ma wants some privacy, but Ma says she wants to get things over with.
Jack and Ma have more to contend with in the real world than just the voyeuristic media—they must face down others’ opinions about their routines and the ways they’ve made life bearable for themselves. The sight of a five-year-old breastfeeding is highly unusual in the world—but Ma is defensive of her and Jack’s rights to do the things that have sustained them and brought them comfort for years.
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After a few minutes, Jack tells Ma that he needs to go back to Room—he has to use Toilet. Ma says that there’s one in the precinct, too, and leads him to the bathroom. Jack is frightened of the toilet’s automatic flush, and surprised when Ma, seeing his soiled underwear, takes them off of him and drops them in the trash. Ma insists they’ll find Jack new ones. Jack asks if he’ll get them for his Sundaytreat, but Ma says that they can get things any day they want now. “That’s weird,” Jack thinks. “I’d rather on a Sunday.”
This passage highlights Jack’s continued preference for the way things were back in Room. He longs for the familiarity and the routine of life in Room, and is confused by the freedom he and Ma have.
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Jack falls asleep while Ma finishes up her interview with the police captain. She wakes him when it’s time to go to the hospital. Jack is confused—a hospital was part of Plan A. He is drowsy and disoriented during the car ride in the police cruiser—and frightened when a “person with no face” opens the door for them at the hospital’s entrance. The doctor greeting Ma and Jack introduces himself as Dr. Clay and explains to Jack that he’s wearing a mask to help keep Jack safe from germs. Dr. Clay hands Jack and Ma masks to wear, too. Jack is surprised that germs are in the real world, too, and not just in Room.
Jack is continually shocked that all the things that existed in Room exist in the outside world, too. Jack had perhaps begun to believe that everything outside of Room would be vastly different, and is disoriented rather than comforted by the knowledge that there are some constants between the two places.
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Inside the hospital, Dr. Clay tells Ma that she needs to be separated from Jack for a few minutes so that the medical resident on duty, Dr. Kendrick, can collect “evidence” from Ma’s body. Jack tries to follow Ma into the exam room, afraid to be parted from her—but he is comforted when he sees a TV on the wall near the reception desk. The admissions coordinator, Pilar, watches over Jack while he watches TV. Jack is exhausted and nearly nods off to sleep, but he perks up when he sees himself and Ma suddenly appear on the television screen. Jack calls out to Ma, telling her that they’re on TV, but Pilar quickly shuts the screen off.
Though Jack is delighted to see himself and Ma on TV, the other people around him know that the invasive, sensationalist media coverage of their case will only prove damaging to Jack, so they attempt to shield him from seeing or hearing things that will upset him.
Themes
Voyeurism and the Media Theme Icon
Quotes
Jack rejoins Ma in her exam room once Dr. Kendrick is done looking at her. Dr. Kendrick asks if she can give Jack a checkup—Ma insists he doesn’t need one. Dr. Clay says that in “other trauma situations,” patients are usually examined right away. Ma says that she has never let Jack out of her sight once in his life, and “nothing like what [they’re] insinuating” has happened to him. Ma begins crying as she begs the doctors to understand how safe she kept Jack for so many years. Dr. Clay asks if Ma is okay with them simply taking Jack’s height and weight and cleaning his scrapes. Ma assents.
The doctors know that Ma was raped repeatedly for years by Old Nick and they are worried that Jack, too, may have been a victim of physical or sexual abuse at the man’s hands. Ma breaks down as she tries to impress upon the doctors just how fiercely she protected Jack, desperate for them to understand all she has sacrificed and given up to ensure that her son’s safety has always come first.
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Jack is spellbound when Dr. Kendrick cleans his scrapes and applies Dora band-aids to the wounds, but he is nervous when she asks to take a blood sample. Ma promises Jack that he’ll get a treat if he’s brave, and Jack chooses a lollipop, but doesn’t like its flavor. He is shocked when Ma tells him he can choose another one.
Even though things are frightening and disorienting for Jack, there are some familiar touchstones—and new incentives—that show him the world might be an okay place to be.
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In the morning, Jack wakes up to find he has peed the bed in the night. He wakes Ma to tell her, but she urges him not to worry about it—the nurses, she says, will come and change the sheets. Ma gets out of bed and raises the blinds covering the window. Jack is mystified by the “wooden stripes,” and Ma slowly explains how blinds work. Jack is confused by Ma’s semantics as she describes how blinds “stop you seeing.”
It is Jack’s first morning in the world, and already there are many new things for him to contend with and try to understand. From his new physical surroundings to Ma’s carefree attitude, a lot has shifted overnight.
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Growing Up Theme Icon
Ma tells Jack it’s time to wash up. Jack is confused—bath, he says, comes after breakfast. Ma explains that they can do things in whatever order they like now, and hurries off to the bathroom. Jack is confused by the shower and afraid to go into it. When Ma throws out Jack’s dirty t-shirt, Jack is upset, even though Ma insists he’ll soon get lots of new ones to replace it. Ma goes into the shower, and though Jack is frightened, he follows her in. As Ma makes noises of relief beneath the hot stream of water, Jack asks her if she's in pain—she replies that she’s simply enjoying her first shower in over seven years. After the shower, Jack is surprised that he and Ma each get their own white fluffy towel and robe.
Jack’s desperation to adhere to routine and his fear of taking on new things speaks to the kind of emotional isolation and disorientation he’s experiencing. Jack is free now—but the possibilities of freedom, the abandonment of routine, and the newness of so many things actually feels more constraining and frightening to him than being in Room ever did.
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After their shower, Jack asks if they can go outside of their room and explore. As Ma helps him put some slippers on, however, he becomes afraid, and asks if Old Nick will find them again. Ma blithely assures Jack that Old Nick doesn’t know where they are and won’t be able to get to them again. As Ma and Jack wander the halls of the clinic, Jack looks out the windows and asks if the world outside is real. Ma assures him it is.
Jack clearly still has a great deal of fear about being in the world—and about being tracked down by Old Nick—but Ma, on the other hand, seems determined not to waste a second worrying or looking back.
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Jack and Ma run into a nurse named Noreen who seems surprised and nervous to see them out and about. She urges them to use the buzzer in their room if they need anything, but Ma says that she and Jack want to eat breakfast in the cafeteria. Noreen lets them by, and Ma and Jack enter the large room. Jack is overwhelmed—being in the cafeteria feels like “a TV planet that’s all about [him and Ma].” Everyone wants to stop and talk to them, welcoming them and congratulating them. Jack is intimidated by all the attention, and he clutches tight to Ma as fellow patients and clinic staff approach him to say hello.
Again, Ma is determined to plunge Jack right into life in the real world. She probably thinks he’ll enjoy being free and experiencing new things, since she herself has missed being in the world so much—but she doesn’t account for Jack’s lingering nostalgia for Room and the prolonged sense of emotional isolation he will endure in the coming days and weeks.
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Ma eats the breakfast brought over to their table hungrily, gulping juice and scarfing bacon, but Jack is overwhelmed and occasionally disgusted by the feast. He doesn’t like the cutlery, which is different from the knives and forks inside Room, and he cannot stomach the pulpy orange juice. Dr. Clay comes over to say hello to Ma and Jack and notices that Jack seems overwhelmed—he suggests that maybe breakfast in the cafeteria is too much for “day one.” Jack wonders what Day One is. Noreen offers to make Jack and Ma some plates and bring them up to the room. Ma, clearly annoyed with Jack’s inability to sit through breakfast, hurries him up and away from the table back towards their room.
Because of Dr. Clay and Noreen’s sensitivity to extreme situations, they understand that dining in the cafeteria is probably not the best thing for Jack to do on his first morning in the world. Ma, though, is obviously frustrated with Jack’s inability to recognize the positivity of what has happened to them—or afraid of confronting her own lingering feelings of fear and isolation.
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That afternoon, after a nap, Jack and Ma wake up to find Dr. Clay knocking on the door. He comes in to check on Ma and Jack. He prescribes Ma some sleeping pills once she tells him she was too wired to really sleep the night before. Ma asks if she can keep her medications in her room rather than having a nurse bring them to her several times a day, “like [she’s] a sick person.”
Ma is not dependent on pills, but Donoghue is clearly laying the groundwork for Ma’s future trouble with her medications. Ma doesn’t want to be treated differently—for the first time in seven years, she just wants to be normal.
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Dr. Clay reveals that he needs to give Jack several vaccines. Dr. Clay asks Jack to be brave, but Jack hides in the bathroom and insists he “used [his] brave all up doing Plan B.” Ma and Dr. Clay manage to wrangle Jack onto the bed and coach him through the vaccinations.
Jack has had a lot demanded of him in the last few days, and he is exhausted, wired, and desperate for the world to stop coming at him quite so fast.
Themes
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After the shots, Jack plays by himself while he listens to Ma and Dr. Clay talk. Dr. Clay discusses the challenges that surely lie ahead for Jack, including issues with social adjustment and special perception. A distressed Ma tells Clay that she’d thought she was helping Jack to be “more or less” OK, even in Room—she is overwhelmed by all the trials still ahead of them both.
Even though Ma did her best within the confines of Room to try to keep Jack healthy, educated, and as “normal” as possible, she is now forced to confront the fact that nothing she could have done within Room could have prepared Jack for life outside it. She did her best—but her circumstances were impossible to begin with, and the deck was stacked against her all along.
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Soon, Noreen brings a policeman into the room, and the two of them begin talking with Ma and Dr. Clay. Jack puts his fingers in his ears to blot out the noise. Ma soon runs over to Jack and shows him a picture—the picture is of Old Nick with a “sign around his neck.” Ma explains that the police have put Old Nick in jail. Dr. Clay warns Ma that showing pictures of Old Nick to Jack might “trigger” him—or her, for that matter—but Ma insists that “after seven years of the real deal,” she’s strong enough to handle a photograph.
Again, Dr. Clay is trying to be hypersensitive to any potential triggers or fears Jack might have—but Ma remains determined not to coddle Jack. She and Jack have been through enough, she asserts, to know that anything happening to them now is easy to handle in the face of what they’ve endured. Ma’s attitude, though, will be called into question as the novel goes on.
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Dr. Clay asks Jack if Old Nick ever hurt him. Ma interjects, insisting she never let such a thing happen, but Dr. Clay urges Jack to answer for himself. Jack says the only time Old Nick hurt him was when he dropped him on the ground during “the Great Escape.” Dr. Clay tells Ma that she and Jack may need to submit to DNA testing—when Ma protests, Dr. Clay begs her not to allow a “monster” like Old Nick get “let off on [a] technicalit[y].”
Ma is so determined to prove to the doctors that she never let anything bad happen to Jack that she resists the red tape and bureaucratic details that must be dealt with. Dr. Clay urges Ma to slow down and stop being so bull-headed—she is free, but there are still things she must do and rules she must follow to ensure her and Jack’s happiness and safety.
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After the doctors and police leave, Ma tells Jack it’s time for lunch. Jack isn’t hungry, but he is worried about skipping lunch. Ma reminds him once again that they can do anything they want to do now, whenever they want to do it. Jack says he’s tired and wants a nap. Ma lays with him in the bed, but reads the paper instead of going to sleep. Jack is confused as to why Ma would rather do something on her own than something with him.
In Room, Jack and Ma did every single thing together at exactly the same pace and exactly the same time, with remarkably few exceptions. Now that Ma is free to reject such a tight schedule, she’s eager to do so—but doesn’t realize that Jack takes comfort and solace in their highly regimented routines.
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After Jack’s nap, he wakes up to a knocking on the door—it’s Noreen, who has brought new clothes for him and Ma. Jack tries on shoes for the first time in his life, but finds them hard to walk in. As Ma dresses in a trendy outfit, Jack tells her that she’s not wearing her “real clothes.” Another nurse comes in to tell Jack and Ma they have visitors—seconds later, a woman rushes into the room and embraces Ma. Ma laughs and cries as she greets her mother for the first time in seven years. Ma happily introduces Jack to his grandma.
Jack is just barely keeping up with the new demands and routines of life outside Room, but there is still more newness to come in the form of brand-new clothes and strange new visitors. The world is not slowing down for Jack, and as more and more of it seems to go over his head, his isolation and anxiety increase.
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Grandma thanks Jack tearily for bringing her “baby” back to her. Jack is confused—he doesn’t know “what baby” she’s talking about. While Ma and Grandma “talk and talk,” Jack distracts himself by looking under his bandages at his scrapes. Soon, a man with a beard enters the room—Grandma introduces the man to Ma and Jack as Leo. Ma is confused and asks where her father is. Grandma replies that Ma’s dad is in Australia—there have been “a lot of changes,” she says, in the years since Ma’s been gone.
So far, Jack has been the one most overwhelmed and disoriented by simply being in the world—now, though, as Ma reunites with her family and sees how much has changed in the seven years she’s been away, her own sense of instability and uncertainty begins creeping in.
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Ma and Grandma talk for a long time while Jack listens surreptitiously. Grandma tells Ma how miserable she’s been since Ma was taken, and how tortured she was by the confusion over whether Ma had been abducted or killed, or had simply run away on her own. Grandma tells Ma that Ma’s brother Paul has a baby girl of his own now, and the two discuss all that’s transpired in the years they’ve been apart. Soon, it’s time for Grandma to leave, and she bids both Ma and Jack a tearful goodbye, promising to come back soon.
Though Jack overhears the conversation between Ma and Grandma, he does not visibly pay attention to them, ask questions, or otherwise attempt to participate. This is a symptom of Jack's ongoing sense of isolation, counterintuitive though it is.
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After dinner, Ma and Jack go to bed—but Jack can’t sleep. He wonders why he and Ma can’t go back to Room just for sleeping, and he is anxious about staying in the clinic forever. Though Ma has told him they simply “need a bit of help while [they] sort things out”—as well as protection from the paparazzi—Jack wishes they could leave. Jack wakes Ma to ask her if they’re locked in at the clinic, but Ma comforts him by assuring him they’re free as birds.
Though Jack and Ma have escaped Room and are now free, Jack cannot get past the feeling of being trapped, locked in, or otherwise controlled. He both wants the familiarity of Room and fears replicating Room’s circumstances somewhere else.
Themes
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Voyeurism and the Media Theme Icon
The next day is full of even more strange, new things. Jack is surprised when cleaners come to take the sheets and wash them—he thought he and Ma would have to wash their sheets in the bathroom forever. He tries syrup on his pancakes for the first time, and continues adjusting to all the strange new sounds in the clinic.
The next day is just as full of new things, but is slightly less overwhelming to Jack as he begins developing a sense of what to expect and how to cope with all the newness around him.
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Ma and Jack meet with Dr. Clay for a therapy session, and after going over Ma’s feelings with her and discussing terms like “depersonalization” and “jamais vu,” Dr. Clay asks Jack how he’s liking the clinic so far. Jack says he doesn’t like “persons looking” and “sudden things.” Dr. Clay asks Jack to tell him about Room, and Jack obliges. Ma complements Jack’s memories of Room with her own, and laments that she couldn’t have made a better life for Jack or gotten him out faster. Dr. Clay reminds her that no one is judging her, but Ma seems distressed.
As Jack’s fears seem to abate somewhat, Ma’s begin rearing their head. Now that Ma has taken Jack out of Room and exposed him to the world, she feels she must answer for the choices she’s made for both of them—and is worried that she will be judged by her caretakers, by her family, by the media, and eventually by Jack himself.
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Voyeurism and the Media Theme Icon
After therapy, Ma and Jack take a nap. When Jack wakes up, he isn’t feeling well, and Ma tells him he has caught his first cold. Jack cries and says he doesn’t want to go to Heaven yet. Ma laughs and assures him that while doctors can’t cure a cold, they are surrounded by people who are helping to make them “better”—nothing, she says, is going to happen to Jack.
Though Jack knows many things that children his age do not, there are certain things he’s learning about for the first time—such as what it feels like to endure a common cold.
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Jack and Ma go down to the lobby of the clinic and look at some fish in a tank. Jack asks if the fish are also resting at the clinic “because they’re famous.” After observing the fish awhile, Ma tells Jack it’s time for them to go outside and get some fresh air. Even though Dr. Clay helps Jack put on a mask and sunglasses, as soon as Jack steps outside, he feels frightened of the wind and sun. Jack begins having a mild panic attack, and Noreen helps him breathe into a paper bag to calm down. Ma brings Jack back inside and up to their room, where she lets Jack breastfeed for a while.
Jack is trying to process and take in all the new rules and information coming at him. He knows that he and Ma are in the clinic partly to be sheltered from the paparazzi, and so he wonders if everyone else in the clinic is there for the same reason—even the fish. When Jack grows too overwhelmed by the world around him, he seeks comfort in his and Ma’s old routines—and Ma, no doubt, draws comfort from them as well.
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Voyeurism and the Media Theme Icon
Grandma comes by to visit Ma and Jack. She brings some books for Jack to read along with her. As Jack looks at the books, he hears Grandma begging Ma to tell her “every detail” of her time in Room, but Ma refuses, insisting she doesn’t want her mother “thinking about that stuff every time” she looks at her. Grandma only stays a while, but after she leaves, there is another visitor—a lawyer named Morris. As Ma talks Morris, he urges her to file suits against several newspapers who used pictures of her over the years. Ma says legal action is the last thing on her mind—but Morris urges her to “consider [her and Jack’s] futures” and all the expenses they’ll need to pay for soon.
Ma must contend with people who want things from her at every turn. Her own mother wants the details of her capture, imprisonment, and escape—details Ma doesn’t want to relive or inflict upon others. Meanwhile, Morris urges Ma to try to get ahead of the media machine—and get paid while she’s doing it. Ma is no doubt beginning to feel less free and fearless as she confronts the pressing demands coming at her from all sides.
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Morris opens up a plastic bag he’s brought with him and produces packages and letters—donations and gifts, he says, from Ma and Jack’s “fans.” As Jack marvels over the toys inside, Morris once again urges Ma to get ahead of the media attention—Ma sarcastically asks if they should “sell [themselves] before somebody else does.” Morris tells Ma to take things “one day at a time.” Ma urges Jack to pick out just five toys to keep—the rest, she says, should go to kids who need them more. Jack surreptitiously chooses six and puts them away quickly before Ma can count.
One of the central themes of the second half of the novel is the voyeuristic and sensationalist nature of the media, and the ways in which it preys upon victims and survivors. Ma’s lawyer urges her to head all that off by agreeing to level with the press—but he doesn’t tell her what she’ll be sacrificing and subjecting herself to if she does.
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Quotes
While Jack squirrels his toys away in the other corner of the room, Morris and Ma talk about the impending trial and Ma asks how long Old Nick will go to prison for. As Morris lists the charges against Old Nick, he estimates the man will get “twenty-five to life.” Ma asks about “the baby”—the first one she had—and whether it “count[s] as some kind of murder.” Jack listens, intrigued—Ma has never told him this story. Before Jack can hear any more, though, Noreen enters the room to tell Ma and Jack it’s dinner time.
The revelation that there was another baby before Jack shifts the foundation beneath his feet. It becomes clear that although Ma has been “unlying” to him for some time now, there are still many things she hasn’t shared with him.
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After dinner, while Jack breastfeeds on the bed, he asks Ma about “the first baby.” Ma explains that a year before Jack was born, she gave birth to a baby girl. The umbilical cord, Ma says, was tangled around the baby girl’s neck, and though Old Nick was in Room while Ma delivered the baby, he refused to help Ma at all—and as a result, the little girl died. Ma tells Jack that when Jack was about to be born, she didn’t let Old Nick anywhere near the room—she wanted it to be just the two of them. Ma tells Jack that she believes the spirit of the baby girl was Jack all along, and got “recycled” when she died to come back as Jack himself.
Ma agrees to tell Jack the story about the first baby she bore Old Nick, but tries to couch the story in optimism and reassurance that Jack is the baby she wanted all along. Ma’s intense devotion to keeping Jack safe—and away from Old Nick even in the confines of Room—begins to make a lot more sense in light of this new information. 
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Ma and Jack sleep fitfully, and Jack even falls out of bed at one point. Ma suggests they use both beds in the room and push them together to make one large bed, but Jack insists on staying in the smaller bed with Ma. In the morning, Ma has caught Jack’s cold, and when Dr. Clay comes by to check on them, he gives Ma the okay for her and Jack to stop wearing their masks. Dr. Clay helps Jack with some art therapy, and they discuss Jack’s habit of counting when he’s nervous. Dr. Clay tells Ma that it’s good she got Jack out when she did—at five, he tells her, children are still “plastic.”
Ma and Jack’s colds symbolize their shared and twinned difficulties with entry—or in Ma’s case, reentry—into the world. First Jack, who suffered more intensely with feelings of being confused and overwhelmed, got the cold—though Ma didn’t get it until later, it comes for her as well, just as her feelings of instability, insecurity, and fear resurface, too.
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Quotes
Later that day, Jack asks Ma what Dr. Clay meant when he called him “plastic.” Ma explains that Dr. Clay believes Jack might forget all about Room one day. Jack asks if he’s supposed to forget, and Ma admits she doesn’t know. Jack thinks about how often Ma has been saying she doesn’t know things lately—in Room, she never said the phrase.
Back in Room, Jack relied on Ma for the answers to everything—and he is perturbed and puzzled by the fact that, out in the world, there seems to be a lot even she doesn’t know. Ma is experiencing her own kind of growing up: she is learning new things about the world and questioning the things she thought she understood.
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After lunch, Ma and Jack go outside again for more fresh air. Jack is scared again, but Noreen is with them, and encourages Jack to pretend he’s watching their outside adventure on TV. Soon, Jack is excitedly exploring the parking lot, marveling at the cars, flowers, grass, and small insects all around. When Jack points out a helicopter overhead, Noreen and Ma hurry him inside, and explain that the helicopter is full of paparazzi. 
Just as Jack was able to cope with things more capably once Officer Oh asked him to tell her a story, he is able to experience things with less anxiety when he pretends they’re TV. Being distanced from what’s truly happening allows Jack to process life in the world more deftly.
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Voyeurism and the Media Theme Icon
Later that afternoon, Grandma arrives with Ma’s brother Paul and his wife Deana. The visit is intense and emotional—Paul cries repeatedly as Deana comforts both him and the confused Jack. Deana tells Jack that she and Paul have a three-year-old daughter, Bronwyn, who is “psyched” to meet him soon. As Jack listens to the adults converse and catch up, he struggles to keep track of who and what they’re talking about. The visit passes in a blur, and Jack’s ears soon grow “tired.” Even after Paul and Deana leave, though, Grandma stays—and brings Leo into the room to spend time with Ma and Jack. Grandma tells Jack he can call Leo “Steppa,” since Leo is his Stepgrandpa.
Jack remains overwhelmed by the presence of too many new people and too much new information. Though he and Ma are surrounded by their family, Jack feels more intensely isolated than he ever did inside of Room. This speaks to the controversial central question at the heart of the novel—whether perhaps, in Room, as awful as it was, Jack felt more at home than he does in the world.
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Jack, who is tired of visitors, asks Ma if he can “have some.” Ma tells him he can later on. Grandma asks what Jack means, and Ma tells her he’s talking about breastfeeding. Grandma is shocked to realize that Jack still breastfeeds, but Ma explains that “there was no reason to stop,” and curtly admonishes Grandma for judging her. Steppa suggests he and Grandma leave and let Jack and Ma rest, and Grandma bids them goodbye. Ma falls asleep soon after they leave, but Jack isn’t tired.
When Ma tells Grandma that there was no need for her to stop breastfeeding Jack inside of Room, what she’s not saying is that there was every reason to keep it up. The act of breastfeeding nourishes Jack and comforts Ma—they each need one another as much as the other needs them.
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Jack picks up a newspaper and reads the headline: “HOPE FOR BONSAI BOY,” it says, and the article below describes Jack and Ma’s ordeal in sensationalized detail. Ma wakes up and snatches the paper from Jack’s hands. He asks her what a bonsai is, and Ma explains that bonsais are tiny trees that people keep inside and cut every day “so they stay all curled up.” Ma tells Jack not to take the paper seriously and urges him to come to sleep. She takes some painkillers for her headache and Jack strokes her hair as they fall asleep, disturbed by the fact that Ma is “still […] hurting in Outside.”
The “BONSAI BOY” headline is cruel but apt, and Ma is angry about it because it forces her to confront the ways in which she had to “prune” Jack’s life and education over the years in order to keep him the right “size” for Room.
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Quotes
Jack has terrible nightmares all night, and when he wakes up in a sweat, Ma lets him breastfeed. Afterwards, he confesses to her that he kept six toys, not five. Ma says it’s all right, and she urges him to go back to sleep.
Ma and Jack are both navigating rocky new terrain—and the act of breastfeeding continues to provide a comfort for both of them.
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In the morning, Ma and Jack lie in bed counting the friends they have made in the world: they list Noreen, Dr. Clay, Dr. Kendrick, Pilar, and Ajeet, as well as Grandma, Paul, and Deana. Jack includes Steppa, but Ma calls him a “rebound.” After counting friends, Ma and Jack head down to breakfast, and then meet with Dr. Clay for therapy. Jack tells Dr. Clay about his frightening dreams, and Clay hypothesizes that Jack’s brain is “doing a spring cleaning”—working through all his unneeded “scary thoughts” from Room now that he’s out. Jack, however, believes that Room was the safe place, and Outside is the scary one.
Dr. Clay tries to tell Jack that the scary dreams he’s having are just part of his subconscious at last recognizing all the scary parts of his life in Room, but Jack doesn’t understand—he believes, still, that Room was actually the safe place. Jack is still isolated from the world and scared of everything in it, but he doesn’t realize that he’s in the process of growing and changing to live inside of it. 
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After therapy, Ma and Jack use the computer for a little while. Ma looks up some of her old friends on a social media website, and then lets Jack watch some Dora videos on YouTube. When they get back to their room, Ma finds a present Paul has sent—it is a device with a “million” songs on it, and Ma starts listening to music happily. When Jack roughly grabs the device, Ma urges Jack to be gentle with her present—Jack is disturbed, because in Room, “everything was [theirs.]”
Things between Ma and Jack are changing. Now that they’re not in Room anymore, they don’t do every activity on the same schedule—and, as Jack is realizing, there are certain emotional and material things that they no longer share.
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The next morning, Jack asks what day it is. Ma tells him it’s Thursday, and Jack asks her if they should start thinking about what to request for Sundaytreat. Ma simply shakes her head in response.
Ma is disturbed by Jack’s inability to accept that the rules of Room no longer apply.
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That afternoon, Ma and Jack are driven in a van to a dentist’s office—the clinic has arranged a “special visit” for Ma and Jack, with only the dentist and an assistant present. On the drive over, Jack looks out the window and marvels at all the “hes and shes on the sidewalks.” When Jack asks about people’s hair and why it’s not all long like theirs, Ma explains that some people have short hair. Jack says he doesn’t want to get rid of his hair and “lose [his] strong,” like Samson in the Bible.
Even though Jack is beginning to realize that there are certain things about him that mark him as different from anyone else, he sees the ways he’s different as a source of strength. He doesn’t want to conform to the ways of the world just yet.
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At the dental appointment, the dentist checks Jack’s teeth and finds that they’re in good shape. Next, the dentist moves onto Ma while Jack plays with some toys and reads some books. Ma’s appointment takes a very long time.
The extensive dental work Ma undergoes allows her to reclaim her teeth—and her identity.
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That night, while Ma and Jack eat dinner, Noreen knocks at the door and tells Ma that her father has arrived from Australia. Ma runs off, leaving Jack behind. Noreen stays with him while he finishes his meal, and then brings him into the common room where Ma and Grandpa are. As soon as he sees Jack, Grandpa jumps out of his seat and shakes his head. Ma tries to introduce Jack to Grandpa, but Grandpa says he can’t bear to be in the same room as the boy. Grandpa hurries towards the door, promising to call from the hotel. Ma begins screaming and banging on the table, urging her father to accept Jack and warning him that if he doesn’t stay, he won’t get another chance with either of them. Grandpa comes back into the room and politely greets Jack.
Ma is furious and indignant when her father refuses to accept or even acknowledge Jack. She has spent so much of her time outside Room justifying her choices about parenting Jack to other people—but the prospect of justifying Jack himself is too much for her to bear, and she puts her foot down.
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Later, back in their own room, Jack asks Ma why Grandpa didn’t want to see him. Ma says that Grandpa thinks she’d be better off without Jack. Jack points out that without him, Ma wouldn’t be Ma—and Ma agrees. Ma promises that soon Grandpa will behave better.
Ma is optimistic even in the face of judgement and cruelty from someone she loves. Her love for Jack is so strong that it renders everyone else’s opinions irrelevant.
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The next day, Ma tells Jack that while he’s taking his afternoon nap, she is going to go downstairs to Dr. Clay’s office to talk to some TV people, and later that night, she will be on TV. Jack asks her why she’s going to talk to the “vultures,” and Ma tells him that if she answers their questions just once, they’ll stop asking. Jack seems nervous about the plan, and so Ma reminds him that tomorrow they are scheduled to go on an adventure to the Natural History Museum with Paul, Bronwyn, and Deana. Jack wraps his arms and legs around Ma and begs her not to leave their room. As Ma tries to push Jack off of her, his head hits the edge of the bedside table, and Jack begins screaming.
Ma has decided to submit to the press’s demands for an interview, but the idea of being separated from Ma fills Jack with intense fear and even panic. Thinking about or pretending to be in TV is normally a comfort for Jack—but the idea of Ma actually going onto TV is perhaps too close to home for him to handle.
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Dr. Clay comes into the room at the sound of Jack’s screams. Ma holds Jack and strokes his face, trying to calm him down. Dr. Clay tells Ma that she can still “pull out” of the interview, but Ma insists she needs to go ahead with it for Jack’s college fund. Ma tells Jack that he can come downstairs with her if he stays silent, and Jack agrees. Dr. Clay warns Ma that plan might not be the best idea, but Ma ignores him and helps Jack put his shoes on.
Since coming to the clinic, Ma has been almost bullheaded in her approach to doing what she wants when she wants to. She’s so happy about her newfound freedom—and feels so invincible—that she even disregards the opinions of her doctor.
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Downstairs, Jack enters Dr. Clay’s office to find it full of “persons and lights and machines.” Morris is there, and he barks orders and reminders at the television crew. Ma shakes hands with a woman with “puffy hair” whom Jack recognizes from TV. He is shocked to meet an “actual person from TV,” and watches intently as Ma sits down and the interview begins. 
TV has long been a comfort for Jack—a way of escaping to other worlds. Now, though, as Jack sees the mechanics of TV up close, the whole concept makes him just as nervous as everything else in the outside world.
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Over the course of the interview, the puffy-haired journalist asks Ma probing, invasive, and sensationalist questions about whether she experienced Stockholm syndrome while living inside Room, about “the tragedy of [her] stillbirth,” and about Jack. Morris pushes back against the questions that go against Ma’s contract, but Ma presses forward and attempts to answer as many questions as she can. The interviewer presses Ma about her decision to breastfeed Jack throughout his childhood, about “deceiving” her child about the reality of the world outside Room, and about whether Ma believes Old Nick cared “in a warped way” for her and Jack.
Ma has attempted to get ahead of the press, and to leverage her brief celebrity in order to secure a financial future for herself and Jack. Unfortunately, Ma cannot outfox the cannibalizing media, and the ruthless, indiscriminate way sensationalized press preys on victims and survivors of enormous tragedies.
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Ma begins talking about how irritated she is by all the media attention. She tells the interviewer that even as difficult as her life in Room was, there are people suffering worse all over the world. Ma invokes the injustice of the prison system and the practice of solitary confinement, as well as abuses in orphanages and child-labor-run factories in other parts of the world. Ma says she wants to shine a light on “people [who] are locked up in all sorts of ways,” but the interviewer quickly redirects the interview and begins asking more invasive questions. She asks if Ma misses being “behind a locked door.” Ma calls the question “stupid,” and Dr. Clay suggests ending the interview. Ma insists on getting it over with.
As the interview continues, Ma tries to regain control of the situation and steer the conversation towards causes more worthy of attention and discussion than her own—but the journalist one-ups Ma and brings the conversation back around to the ways in which Room has warped her.
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Quotes
The journalist resumes the interview and asks Ma whether she ever considered giving Jack away, “so he could be free.” She accuses Ma of knowing what Jack was missing and yet keeping him with her out of selfishness and a desire to put an end to her own loneliness. Ma begins crying, unable to answer the question. Jack runs over to the couch and leaps onto Ma’s lap, and Morris quickly orders the camera people to shut their devices off and stop the interview.
Jack cannot stand to see Ma upset, and as Ma realizes she has completely lost control of the interview, she breaks down in tears. Jack knows that she needs him in such moments, and goes to her in an attempt to ease her pain.
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In the morning, when Jack wakes up, Ma is having a Gone day. Jack is surprised that she has days like this even outside of Room. Noreen comes into the room, and Jack explains Ma’s Gone state. Noreen tries to ask Ma if there’s anything she can get her, but Ma answers in a monstrous voice that she just wants to sleep. Noreen helps Jack get dressed and tells him that Paul is waiting downstairs.
Ma’s Gone state seems to be a direct result of the stress she suffered during the TV interview—and the self-loathing she seems to be feeling in its wake.
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Noreen brings Jack to visit Dr. Clay, who greets him happily and asks him if he’s okay going out to the museum with just Paul, Deana, and Bronwyn. Jack is worried that if he doesn’t go with them today, the dinosaurs at the museum will disappear, so he agrees to the outing. Noreen brings Jack to meet Paul in the cafeteria, and they eat breakfast. Paul says it’s probably good that Ma isn’t coming with them today, because “after that TV show last night, everybody knows her face.”
Even though Ma is in a terrible state, Jack is excited for the first time about going out into the world beyond the clinic. He is learning that he and Ma can do different things and still be okay on their own—a hard lesson to learn, and one that will soon suffer a great setback.
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Paul leads Jack outside to the parking lot, where Deana is waiting in the car. Bronwyn is in a car seat in the back, and Jack sits in a booster seat beside her. As the four of them begin driving, Jack reminds himself not to be scared—he is on an adventure. Paul tells Jack they’re going to make a stop at the mall to pick out a present for Bronwyn to take to a birthday party later. Paul plans on going in by himself, but once they get to the mall, Bronwyn insists on going in, and Deana says they should all go together.
Paul and Deana don’t seem to realize how fragile Jack is and how little he knows about the world. A trip to the mall is a deviation from the agenda—and a potential minefield.
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Inside the mall, Jack is amazed by how big the building is, and he almost immediately seizes on a Dora bag at a department store. Deana helps Jack put the backpack on and offers to buy it for him. Deana pays for the backpack but hurries the family out of the store when Bronwyn begins throwing a temper tantrum. Jack takes his shoes off as they walk to the next store, and a woman picks them up and gives them to Deana. Deana becomes nervous that someone is going to recognize Jack, and says as much to Paul. Jack, sensing the tension, asks if they can return to the clinic. Deana assures Jack that they’ll soon be leaving for the museum.
The mall is a cacophony of chaos as Paul and Deana attempt to juggle their own agenda with Jack’s peculiar needs. Paul and Deana want to keep Jack happy—but they also want to keep him safe, and are uncertain of what they should do if he’s recognized in public.
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On the way to the toy store, the group passes the food court and stops for snacks. Jack asks to use the bathroom, and Deana takes him and Bronwyn. They all go into a stall together. Jack pees into the toilet, and then Deana flushes, lowers the seat, and sits Bronwyn down. Intrigued by Bronwyn’s private parts, Jack reaches out to touch her—Deana hits him, and her wedding rings scrape his hand. Jack begins screaming. Deana apologizes profusely, and after wiping Bronwyn, she helps Jack wash his hands and put some pressure on the little cut. Deana leads Jack and Bronwyn out of the bathroom and tells Paul they need to leave—they can find a gift for Bronwyn’s party later.
Jack knows right from wrong when it comes to complicated moral problems—but simple social cues like keeping his hands to himself and understanding the concept of “private parts” are beyond Jack due to the lack of boundaries he and Ma had in Room.
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Jack, however, spots his favorite book from Room, Dylan the Digger, in the window of a nearby book store. He runs toward it, and the whole family goes into the store. Deana shoves a book for the party in Paul’s hand and asks him to go pay for it—meanwhile, Jack shoves the Dylan book into his Dora bag. On the way out of the store, a man pulls Paul aside and tells him that Jack has the book in his bag. Paul reprimands Jack, but at the same time, tells Deana how bad he feels about how little of the world Jack understands. 
Again, this passage illustrates how Jack doesn’t understand a lot about social norms and cues that most people take as a given from a young age. Paul and Deana perhaps didn’t realize the degree to which Jack lacked socialization—but after their trip to the mall, they understand just how behind Jack is.
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Paul brings Jack back to the clinic right after the mall. Noreen leads Jack back up to his room, and Jack snuggles into bed with Ma. He notices right away, though, that the pillow smells bad. Jack realizes Ma has vomited and tries to shake her awake, but she doesn’t move or respond. Jack runs to get Noreen and brings her back to the room. As soon as she sees Ma, she calls for a code blue, and nurses and doctors swarm into the room. Jack notices that almost all of Ma’s painkillers are gone from the bottle. “Bad idea,” Jack screams at Ma as a nurse pulls him out of the room.
Ma’s suicide attempt on the heels of her Gone day shows just how deeply affected she is by the disastrous TV interview—and the claims made against her parenting style and choices about raising Jack. Ma is in the grips of an existential crisis about her time in Room and the decisions she made there, and the isolation she feels as a result has been exacerbated by the probing media scrutiny. 
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