The final step in
Campbell’s Hero’s Journey Monomyth is the return home from the unknown, and Donoghue
seems to take this very literally. After overcoming the main obstacle in the
book, taking down Old Nick in the Great Escape, Jack immediately wants to go
back to Room, the home he has known his whole life. At that point, Ma wants to
get as far away as possible, so Jack waits until she is ready before asking to see
it again. She grudgingly calls Officer Oh and arranges for them to go, which
surprised me, as I was afraid that Jack would see this as a return home. However,
his reaction was almost the opposite of this, and I think it aptly brought the
story to a close.
We see the first sign of
Jack’s disillusionment as they arrive at Room. He doesn’t recognize Old Nick’s
house, and when he sees the shed, he doesn’t believe such a small place could
really have been all he knew for the first five years of his life. “We step in
through Door and it’s all wrong. Smaller than Room and emptier and it smells
weird […]. ‘I don’t think this is it, I whisper to Ma.’” Having been exposed to
the vastness of the world, he can’t recognize the old Jack that wanted to come
back to Room after escaping. Even in such a short time outside, he has already outgrown
the marks that were used to measure this old Jack on his birthdays, and he forgets
simple things about his life there, such as where plant was. Somehow, it feels as
though his life in Room was oddly separate from his life in Outside, and that
he is looking back upon his old life with the eyes of a different person. Finally,
he realizes that this is not where he belongs, and decides to say goodnight (or
rather, as Ma suggests, goodbye) to Room, thus concluding his transition into
the real world.
I found this to be a very
satisfying ending, and although it might be more of a coming-of-age than a heroic
return, I think it actually follows Campbell’s paradigm quite nicely. The
reason for this is that Jack’s challenge in the book is not just to escape, but
also to adjust to the real world. Indeed, the fact that his escape comes in the
middle of the book, and that there are two sections after it indicates that the
hardest part for Jack is to come to grips with the colossal nature and
diversity of Outside, the place that will become his home. In this view, Donoghue’s
ending brings us closure, in that Jack says his goodbyes and parts ways with
Room, ready to go to his real home in the outside world.