Room Temperature by Nicholson Baker: Book Cover

    Room Temperature by Nicholson Baker, Marty Asher (Editor)

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    (Paperback - Reissue)

    • Pub. Date: April 1991
    • 116pp
    • Sales Rank: 173,711
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      • Overview
      • Editorial Reviews
      • Meet the Writer

      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: April 1991
      • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
      • Format: Paperback, 116pp
      • Sales Rank: 173,711

      Synopsis

      In his second novel, Baker turns a young father's feeding-time reverie into a catalog of the minutiae of domestic love.

      Annotation

      The author of the quirky masterpiece The Mezzanine turns a young father's feeding-time reverie into a dazzling catalog of the minutiae of domestic love. "A delightful book, homey and comfortable as a slipper. . . . Every page provokes the shock, or at least the smile, of recognition."--Washington Post.

      Publishers Weekly

      Baker's first novel, The Mezzanine , was hailed for its minimalist conceit--the story of a lunch-hour sortie to buy shoelaces--and its exhaustive cataloging of objects encountered and thoughts entertained. For readers impressed with the precision of Baker's descriptive powers but chilled by its clinical rigor, this second novel will deliver a welcome warmth. Occasioned by a 20-minute bottle-feeding of his infant daughter ``Bug,'' narrator Michael Beal, a young house-hus- band, transforms the sounds and textures of an autumn afternoon into an absorbed--and absorbing--reverie: ``The Bug's nostril had the innocent perfection of a cheerio a tiny dry clean salty ring, with the odd but functional smallness . . . of the smooth rim around the pistil of the brass pump head that you fitted over a tire's nipple to inflate it.'' In a refreshing bit of candor, the narrator baldly states the author's goals: ``I certainly believed, rocking my daughter on this Wednesday afternoon, that with a little concentration one's whole life could be reconstructed.'' In a classic pairing of form and content, meditations on the images of infancy develop into mature, if somewhat ingenuous, reflections on the transit to adulthood. This is a small masterpiece by an extraordinarily gifted young writer. (Apr.)

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      Biography

      The undisputed Master of Minutia, Nicholson Baker is known for elegantly written, virtually plotless novels, filled with meticulously detailed descriptions, and for nonfiction that is unconventional, passionate, and often controversial.

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