Emma Donoghue on writing Room: âI toned down some of the horror of the Fritzl caseâ
I got the notion to write Room in 2008 when I was driving to a book event and mulling over a news story from a few days before about a five-year-old called Felix Fritzl, rescued from the Austrian dungeon where his mother had raised him and his siblings. By the time I parked, and grabbed a napkin to scribble down my thoughts, I knew my novel had to be from the childâs point of view, would begin on his fifth birthday and be split into two halves by the escape, and would be called (in an echo of womb) Room. To tone down some of the horror, and distance Jackâs story from Felixâs, I made him a well-nourished only child, the captor a stranger rather than his maâs father, their home a locked shed with a skylight and ventilation somewhere in the US.
But the novel really started years earlier, when I gave birth to the first of our two kids. From day one â or middle-of-the-night one, rather â I found child-rearing fascinating. I was a youngest-of-eight who had never had a job that required set hours or responsibility, and motherhood broke and remade me. Only when I got the idea for Room did I realise that I had three and a half yearsâ worth of things to say. About what a huge gap separates an adult and a small child, with only curiosity, humour and love to bridge it. About how a mother is her babyâs captor and prisoner, sometimes both at the same time. About how you long to give your growing kid freedom while somehow, impossibly, keeping them perfectly safe. Jackâs story was an intensification of every childhood, so I wasnât writing a crime novel so much as a coming-of-age story in which the growing up had to happen overnight when that door opened. It was also sci-fi, because heâd be an alien among us; and a fairytale that would have to find its way into realism.
Jacob Tremblay and Brie Larson in the 2016 adaptation of Room. Photograph: Caitlin Cronenberg/HandoutIâm often asked how Room changed my life, and really it didnât, because I wrote it when I was 40 and had already spent two decades in the luxurious position of getting to write what I liked, full time. Reaching millions more readers has been a thrill, and writing the screen adaptation certainly has opened doors to me in the world of film and TV.
Also, Room has altered something about my fiction. I donât expect every novel of mine to be a bestseller, but thereâs a new emphasis on gripping plots. Iâm drawn to situations of unbearable intensity, such as the maternity quarantine ward in a 1918 Dublin hospital in The Pull of the Stars. The settings often have, if not a locked door, then a claustrophobic quality and a ticking clock. All our lives are limited, after all, so I like to see what happens when I set extreme limits â how my characters come to care so rapidly and intensely about each other, and even find moments of transcendence within their prisons.
Emma Donoghueâs latest novel, The Pull of The Stars, is out now in paperback (Picador).