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In The Night Room (2006)

In the Night Room (2006)

Book Info

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Genre
Rating
3.43 of 5 Votes: 2
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ISBN
0345491327 (ISBN13: 9780345491329)
Language
English
Publisher
ballantine books

About book In The Night Room (2006)

About 20 pages into "In The Night Room," Peter Straub reveals that his previous book, "lost boy lost girl," was a bit of a put-on, a fictional novel written by Straub's fictional alter ego, Timothy Underhill. That seems kind of a dirty trick to play on readers who invested their time and suspension of disbelief in "lost boy lost girl." Waddaya mean the last novel was just a novel??!! Waddaya mean you just made it up and it never really happened??!! This is all getting too meta for me. "In The Night Room" tells the "real" story: Underhill wrote "lost boy lost girl" as a way to deal with his grief over the disappearance and presumed murder of his nephew, Mark.A week away from the publication of "lost boy lost girl," odd things are happening to Tim Underhill. Tim is the recurring hero of a number of Straub's stories and novels, so odd things rarely ever STOP happening to him. This time, it's odd e-mails: cryptic, fragmentary, vaguely threatening messages from untraceable senders. He's hallucinating(?), seeing his sister's ghost and vengeful angels in the streets of New York. An overly aggressive "fan" accosts Underhill at a diner, armed with multiple copies of "lost boy lost girl" (which hasn't even been published yet) and spouting delirious literary theories about rare "real" books -- the books the authors meant to write as opposed to the flawed versions that actually got published. (It's a clever and witty explanation for why some critics praise obviously wretched books: They just got the REAL version.) Tim's mystery e-mail contact explains that a copy of "lost boy lost girl" made it into the afterlife, where apparently the libraries for dead people are filled with "real" books. Tim's novel seriously pissed off a ghost, who has returned for retribution and to clear his name (and they always told me in journalism school that you couldn't libel the dead).A quick hop across the state line, in New Jersey, Willy Patrick is also being haunted, though more figuratively. She's struggling to cope with the recent murders of her husband and daughter. She's just written a novel for young people called "In The Night Room." Oh, geez, here we go again.Amid all the literary bait-and-switch, rug-pulling and games of who's-writing-whom is a running commentary on the writing life itself. Straub presents storytelling as a means of salvation for the writer, a way of molding personal pain into something productive. Occasionally, it can even be lifesaving. There's a playful accounting of the practice of book tours, readings, signings and interaction with the fans. (I've been to a few of these, and I've talked to Mr. Straub. Hope I didn't come off as one of THOSE people.) He literalizes the relationship between author and characters around the framework of a chase thriller.All of this business about writers writing about writers (writing about writers) could be insufferably self-involved, and there's been too damn much of it going on in too many novels. But in Straub's hands, this doesn't feel like solipsism. It's a natural expansion of longtime running themes in Straub's work as he explores the permeable boundaries of what is factual and what is true. "I like the space between," Tim explains. "The space between dreaming and wakefulness. Between imagination and reality. Between no and yes. Between is and is not. That's where the interesting stuff is." (Willy replies, "That's so stupid it might actually mean something.")"In The Night Room" isn't a good book for readers new to Straub. It's part of a much larger story arc that goes back a decade and a half, maybe even further. Tim Underhill's got a few novels' worth of history that can't be easily summarized, and that could alienate newbies (who should go back and find a copy of "Koko." Enjoy!). But for those faithful who have been eagerly following Straub into the shadows, this is an elegant addition to the dark universe he's been creating for years.

Tim Underhill is currently promoting his new release, lost girl lost boy, when he begins receiving emails from a person named Cyrax who claims to be from "the Other Side." Cyrax tells Tim an angel with an unpronouncable name is being sent to clean up a problem Tim has made. In his new book, about his lost nephew Mark and the ghost girl patterned after Lily Kalendar, daughter of a serial killer Joseph Kalendar. Tim made a wrong accusation about one of his characters, based on Lily Kalendar's father, and he wants it corrected. It seems that when Tim was younger, he and his sister Alice were killed but Tim was brought back. Unfortunately his brush with the Other Side made a rift in the dimensions through which spirits occasionally seep. Kalendar has escaped, wanting revenge. While he's trying to figure out all this, Willy Patrick, the woman in his new book is abruptly swept into his life as a real person. To his amazement, Tim, who is gay, falls in love with his creation and wants to keep her with him though he's well aware by helping Willy resolve the problems he has written her into, he'll lose her when her story ends.This is probably a very confusing synopsis but this novel is a very complicated one. For the first part of the story as Tim's and then Willy's lives unfold, they are both presented as real people, and since both are writers, the characters they have created are treated as real people also. A writer dies, his characters are left in a dreary limbo, their stories incomplete. It is only when Willy is abruptly thrust into Tim's world during one of his personal appearances that it's realized she isn't real and this is a shock to both her and the reader, as well as the people pursuing her who are brought along with her.This is a suspenseful, complex, multi-layered story, told from several viewpoints. It continues the story begun in lost girl lost boy, bringing it to its ultimate and inevitable but bittersweet, conclusion. Tim also learns that for every book written, occasionally one becomes the perfect book, but that copy gets lost among the many made, and it's a very fortunate person indeed who finds it...and isn't that what all of us who are writers long for, whether we actually ever see that perfect copy or not?This may not be considered a good review but all I have to say is: Read the book for yourself. You'll enjoy it, you'll empathize with Willy and Tim, and undoubtedly you 'll also find it difficult to summarize their story to others...and perhaps that's the beauty of the entire tale.

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Having read 'The Talisman' and 'Black House' and simply adoring those books I was excited to jump into this book knowing that Peter Straub was the author....Unfortunately.....this book was nowhere near the incredible stories of the above mentioned books (along with the help of Stephen King these 2 books are fantastic). The story was at times confusing and hard to follow.....there were some pretty entertaining parts such as the mass amounts of chocolate, Coca-Cola, and sugar needed to save Willy from perishing but the continuous use of "Butt-Sex" as the nickname for Timothy Underhill by his so-called 'spiritual advisor' Syrex was just annoying and a bit offensive.The supernatural aspect of the book started out as a great concept but never did hash out to anything spectacular or fascinating. The book-within-a-book concept was also great in the beginning but ended up just fizzling out with a less than climactic ending.I really want to read something else of Peter Straub's to find out how his writing can really reach out and grab you.....it just wasn't this book......but I am willing to give him another chance.....'Ghost Story' will probably be the book to do it for me.....
—Tracy Walters

This came to my attention via a glowing offhand recommendation from Nick Mamatas:And Peter Straub’s metafictional In the Night Room compares favorably to anything, anything, written in the past twenty years or so, by anyone.Do not believe the hype.I kept reading almost to the end before giving up and skimming, in the increasingly futile hope that it was just doing something really clever by being deliberately awful. Alas, no. I am pretty positive this is just bad. Here is your checklist:* Über-creepy overuse of the word “gamine.” The exact cumulative effect here was rarified and hard to describe, but you can get pretty close by looking for message board discussions of which underage anime girl is more moe.* Stephenkingception. Yes, that’s correct, this is a book about a writer writing a book about a writer.* Incredibly janky and incomplete plotting and structure, which mostly fall into the category of lingering first-draftisms. Characters who think things like “I don’t know why, but I just can’t explain the situation to this other character until much later!” (← paraphrase.) Potentially interesting structural gambits introduced and then completely abandoned. (There’s one passage that briefly looked like it might be an extrusion from a later draft of the book-within-a-book, but it never bore any fruit.) Overly instrumental character mood transitions. Improper mid-boss disposal. Unfired arsenal strewn about this mantlepiece like raccoons got in there. If this shit was only afflicting the fictional fictional world in the story, I’d have eventually decided it was hilarious, but it’s even worse in the first-order fictional world! Unless… :O :O :O there’s a game beyond the game??? NOPE, DON’T CARE.(There is in fact a game beyond the game, yes, okay, I already know about Lost Boy, Lost Girl, shut up. It doesn’t justify this book sucking.)* Über-creepy danger-induced sexual pliability in the heroine and ludicrous flattery of protagonist’s sexual prowess. Yes, okay, I get the metafictional joke there, and the other metafictional joke; it was still stomach-turning. Also, to make that joke truly funny, there would have to be a punchline somewhere, a more drastic and thorough negation of Underhill’s expectations (specifically in regard to this Willy’s interior life, not just his expectations on the plot and premise level) later, and the whole thing was ultimately written the same way you’d write it if you weren’t having us on. If a tree falls in the etc. etc. etc.* Clunky prose. Like, really bad. Bad enough that I really honestly did think it was a ruse until about page 200.Of course, stirred into the mess are some really good kernels of invention and premise. The bit about the “real books” (every book has a platonic-form perfect version in the higher planes, and copies sometimes leak over between worlds) is obvious poison, but it’s a deliciously seductive poison. The underlying nut of the story is about how fiction can cause real harm, and I can dig that. Kohle was suitably menacing (before he disappeared from the book for the middle three fifths, see above re: janky plotting). I AM GENERALLY DOWN FOR METAFICTION. But none of the rest of it lives up to any of those fragments of promise.PW gave this thing a starred review. I feel like I am being trolled here and can’t tell who’s doing the trolling. I would say “don’t read this book,” but I actually want you all to read it so you can suffer along with me. >:[
—Nick Fagerlund

Okay, I tried with this book. I really tried, but I only got to page 240 (almost two-thirds way through). It is rare for me to give up on a book, even a bad book, but especially a book I have already invested so much time in.Aside from the fact that the story is extremely hard to follow and not particularly engaging, the writing is bad...really bad, ie "Coverley's blond head snapped sideways, and his spoiled face hardened in concentration," (God that sounds painful), so bad that I couldn't forget I was reading.There were moments when I thought, okay, this is going to get better, and pushed forward, only to be disappointed. There was nothing in this book for me. The characters were contrived and uninteresting, and the story, confusing and odd, with neither the creepiness or horror elements I expected. This was a random pick off the library shelf for me. Peter Straub has edited several "horror" collections that I have come across and I figured I'd give his work a try. I'm willing to give him another shot, but so far, not impressed.I would not recommend this book, however, if you enjoy cheesy, contrived characters and odd, unconvincing story lines you might want to give it a try. In all fairness...maybe if I had stuck with this one it would have gotten better...maybe.Here's an example of the writing that put me over the edge:Context: Willy is a fictional character, who crosses over into the real world while being pursed by her psycho, ex-CIA fiance. She turns up at a B & N reading of an author she likes to read when depressed who also happens to be her creator. They have this immediate connection and she ends up in bed with this man...totally innocent...she's just scared, he's helping her, and this is what happens next. Also, up to this point, he's gay. "Where are you?" she said. "Are you there? Ah, I see, you are there. My goodness. Don't you think you should sort of wiggle out of that stupid thing you're wearing? You're so huge, you're going to strangle yourself."I wiggled out of the stupid thing, my panting organ even harder for having been so blatantly flattered, and she shed her bra and her little tighty-whity with what seemed one fluid motion, and after that a kind of paradise opened before us. When I entered her, it was like entering paradise. Within her, I felt miraculously, blissfully at home---in the perfect place at last. I fell in love---that's the corniest, most banal, and truest way to say it. Before, I had felt as though I was falling in love, and now I had completed the journey. I was there, I wanted to hold her, cherish her, celebrate her for the rest of my life. It happened that quickly. I felt cleaved to Willy Patrick, as if we had one soul. We were like the gods depicted in erotic transport on half-ruined temples lost in the middle of great jungles. In the end, we seemed to flow together, to wear each other's skin and fine ecstatic release as one four-legged, four0armed, two-headed organism."God," Willy breathed. "You're the author I want when I'm depressed, all right. I'm going to stop fretting about agency. I don't care. I've never been fucked like that before, and I want more of it."So judge for yourself.
—Shaun

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