From Publishers Weekly
Monologist and writer Gray committed suicide in 2004 after a protracted bout with mental illness. Before he died, he had been at work on
Life Interrupted, a monologue about the aftermath of a horrific car accident he suffered while traveling in Ireland. Gray is replaced here by legendary playwright and actor Shepard, who provides a gravelly dignity to Gray's ruminations on illness and death. Shepard does a nice job of pausing between sentences, as if thinking of how best to describe his conundrum. Shepard is joined by novelist Francine Prose, who reads her own lengthy tribute to Gray and eulogies for Gray by figures including filmmaker Aviva Kempner, Gray's stepdaughter Marisa and his widow, Kathleen Russo. Their tributes, given at the time of his death, are far less polished than Gray's own monologue, but as homespun expressions of love and affection in the aftermath of his death, are perhaps the most affecting aspect of this well-wrought tribute to Gray's legacy.
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From Booklist
Gray turned every odd twist and turn of his life into material for his famous, influential monologues. His experiences on the set of
The Killing Fields became
Swimming to Cambodia. His attempts to buy a vacation home became
Monster in a Box. It seems oddly natural, if vaguely unsettling, that, a year after his suicide, a new piece entitled
Life Interrupted should appear. It doesn't chronicle Gray's wild afterlife, however, but is instead a brief recounting of experiences immediately before and after a life-threatening automobile accident in Ireland in summer 2001. Of course, Gray would have added to the monologue in performance; that was his practice. Still, as is, this compact story is witty, insightful, fascinating, and free of the wounded, annoying narcissism that crept into many of his recent pieces. Published with it here are a poignant short story and a fine portrait of New York City, as well as eulogies delivered at memorial services by such notables as Laurie Anderson and John Perry Barlow.
Jack HelbigCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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