The Mars Room by Rachel Kushner

The Mars Room

by Rachel Kushner

SHORTLISTED FOR THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE 2018

A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

From the author of internationally acclaimed The Flamethrowers – a fearless and heartbreaking novel about love, friendship and incarceration.

Romy Hall is starting two consecutive life sentences at Stanville Women’s Correctional Facility. Her crime? The killing of her stalker.

Inside awaits a world where women must hustle and fight for the bare essentials. Outside: the San Francisco of her youth. The Mars Room strip club where she was once a dancer. Her seven-year-old son, Jackson.

As Romy forms friendships over liquor brewed in socks and stories shared through sewage pipes her future seems to unfurl in one long, unwavering line – until news from beyond the prison bars forces Romy to try and outrun her destiny.

'Kushner is one of our most outstanding modern writers' STYLIST

'More knowing about prison life
[than Orange Is The New Black]... so powerful' NEW YORK TIMES

'Breathtaking' VOGUE

Reviewed by ibeforem on

2 of 5 stars

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I've wrestled with my feelings about this book, and I think I've fallen solidly on the side of "meh". I struggled to get through it, but kept going because I was interested in the prison drama of it all. I can appreciate the literary quality of the writing, but the story structure left something to be desired. Sometimes things are linear, sometimes we're jumping around from person to person at different places in time, and I often forgot who I was reading about and had to check back to see.

The bulk of the story is about Romy, an exotic dancer who kills a man who is stalking her and is sent to jail for it for life. She's strangely dispassionate about it, except when she's thinking about the son she has left behind and will never see again. But even then, he eventually ends up to be more of a bargaining chip, a way for her to get attention. And like Romy's story, I liked the stories of many of the other characters that are woven in, even though I found everyone (including Romy) to be a stereotypical "type". My biggest problem was that nothing tied together in the end.

And speaking of the end, I hated it. I literally turned the "page" on my kindle expecting more and found nothing. I guess I'm not a fan of an ambiguous ending. I think it really added to my annoyance that I finished the book and immediately though "that's it?"

There are many, many stellar reviews of this book online, and it was long-listed for a Man Booker prize, so it's entirely possible that I'm missing something big here. I guess you'll have to read it yourself to decide.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 24 April, 2019: Finished reading
  • 24 April, 2019: Reviewed