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Book Review: ‘The Repeat Room,’ by Jesse Ball

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Jesse Ball’s Kafkaesque novel imagines a legal system that deploys a shockingly personal device.

THE REPEAT ROOM, by Jesse Ball


No one enjoys jury duty, but few will find the process as harrowing as Abel Cotter does. In a dystopian future, Abel is summoned with others to undergo a series of bizarre tests that assess their worth as potential judges: “Only one person will be left, one fit person.” The chosen will enter the mysterious “repeat room” and render a verdict for the defendant.

This is the beginning of Jesse Ball’s “The Repeat Room,” the prolific author’s 20th book. The premise plays out like an inversion of Franz Kafka’s “The Trial,” in which we navigate a similarly nightmarish and Byzantine legal system through the eyes of the juror instead of the accused.

Abel enters the courthouse a sad and broken man. He calls himself a “heavy-machine operator” yet is quickly corrected. “Says here you’re a garbageman,” the receptionist replies. “Around here we want the truth.” We learn Abel’s child was taken by the authoritarian state after he and his wife at the time “were deemed incompetent, emotionally incompetent, culturally incompetent.” Just as arbitrarily as he was punished, Abel is soon elevated. Selected as the juror on a case, he is promised access to a better life. “We know the kind of person you are now. Most of the population are still question marks.”

Ball’s future is a cold one where human connection is scarce. “Who draws anymore?” another potential juror says. “If I want a picture of a diver or a musket or an elephant riding a canary, I just ask the telescreen and there it is.” This may seem like an extension of our present, but Abel’s society was reorganized after an upheaval called the Days of the Change. The speculative elements are minimally sketched yet effectively conjure a dystopia of despair and dehumanization.

However, the legal system of this impersonal future deploys a shockingly personal device. The titular “repeat room” is a chamber that allows Abel to experience the story of the defendant. At the halfway point of the novel, Abel enters the repeat room and Ball makes a bold narrative choice: The book you were reading ends, and a new one begins.

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