This is a perfectly good book. The timing just wasn’t right for me in more ways than one. I was sick for half of February and wasn’t feeling up to reading anything that required thinking, and then Bad Stuff just kept happening, I had other things on my mind and my heart simply wasn’t in the book. I would’ve DNFed when I realized I got stuck, but I really didn’t want to do that to the first Bookbug book I read… Oh well, I did finish it after all! Yay for that!
I’m afraid I don’t have many thoughts, since half of the time I was just waiting for the book to be over :/ I liked Baldwin’s writing, concise, but with just enough striking details to paint a clear picture. I liked that the titular room could represent so much: occasionally it was a bubble where David and Giovanni could be together, other times it represented the closet, the shame that comes with internalized homophobia and the loneliness of it all. This is a book about very lonely people. I wish I were reading it at some other time in my life when I could connect to it more.
I suppose this was why I asked her to marry me: to give myself something to be moored to. Perhaps this was why, in Spain, she decided that she wanted to marry me. But people can’t, unhappily, invent their mooring posts, their lovers and their friends, anymore than they can invent their parents, life gives these and also takes them away and the great difficulty is to say “Yes” to life.