The Repeat Room
A Novel
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
Franz Kafka meets Yorgos Lanthimos in this provocative new novel from one of America’s most brilliant and distinctive writers
In a speculative future, Abel, a menial worker, is called to serve in a secretive and fabled jury system. At the heart of this system is the repeat room, where a single juror, selected from hundreds of candidates, is able to inhabit the defendant’s lived experience, to see as if through their eyes.
The case to which Abel is assigned is revealed in the novel’s shocking second act. We receive a record of a boy's broken and constrained life, a tale that reveals an illicit and passionate psycho-sexual relationship, its end as tragic as the circumstances of its conception.
Artful in its suspense, and sharp in its evocation of a byzantine and cruel bureaucracy, The Repeat Room is an exciting and pointed critique of the nature of knowledge and judgment, and a vivid framing of Ball's absurd and nihilistic philosophy of love.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In the loosely sketched dystopian world of Ball's blistering latest (after the memoir Autoportrait), trials are conducted by ordinary people who gain access to the mind of the accused. Several decades into the future, following the dissolution of an unnamed country's "primitive" criminal justice system, garbageman Abel Cotter is chosen to act as judge and juror in the trial of a teenage boy for an unspecified capital crime. (One way the totalitarian government remains in control is by keeping its laws secret, so people never know whether they're breaking them.) In the second of the book's two parts, Ball switches to the unnamed boy's point of view, telling the story of his life as it's witnessed by Abel through a kind of consciousness-melding technology. It would be a spoiler to reveal the details of the boy's lurid and painful story, which casts him as a victim of his circumstances. Ball's tragic character study of the accused stands in stark relief to the chilling depiction of the court system and its low estimation of human life ("The more people think people have value, the worse they are at killing them," an official explains to Abel). This strikes a chord.