Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Book World: Laugh, cry with Michael J. Fox’s word tapestry

- Porochista Khakpour The Washington Post

By Michael J. Fox Flatiron. 256 pp. $27.99 --When Michael J. Fox told the world, in 1998, that he had been fighting Parkinson’s disease for the past seven years, it felt devastatin­g to me in many ways. For one thing, like a lot of people of my generation, I had been a big fan of the hit ‘80s TV sitcom “Family Ties” - obsessed with Alex P. Keaton without fully understand­ing the implicatio­ns of his role as a weird Reagan-stanning surly Republican.

Fox’s disclosure was doubly shocking as not only was he just 29 when he was diagnosed, he was also not the kind of celebrity who seemed vulnerable at all. To imagine him compromise­d in any crisis seemed impossible. For a while I had no idea how to process his struggles, though I was amazed he was still surviving as the years went by. I assumed wealth and celebrity were part of what kept him alive. Those privileges might have been a piece of it, but it wasn’t until I got sick myself, with latestage Lyme disease, that I realized how much one’s attitude can also factor into one’s health, and that while a positive outlook can’t save you, a very strong drive to live certainly counts for something.

I used this thinking anyway to justify my own survival all these years (whether true or not), and I thought about it a lot reading Michael J. Fox’s recent memoir, his fourth book, “No Time Like the Future: An Optimist Considers Mortality.” The book joins his other works in showing what attitude means to the illness equation. But unlike his other memoirs, here he is not just walking us through his diagnosis and the subsequent traumas of living publicly with a degenerati­ve disorder. That piece of it is well known by now, and in fact there are many young people who know Fox more for his illness than for his acting.

This time Fox’s story is focused on something more unthinkabl­e - the other things that can go wrong with a body that’s still carrying a devastatin­g disease, whether it is just the wear and tear of aging or other, more serious affliction­s. This book centers on life going on for better or for worse, pivoting ultimately on a particular­ly impossible 2018, Fox’s “annus horriblis” as he calls it. Fox underwent major spinal surgery after a tumor had been found to on his spinal cord - unrelated to his Parkinson’s - and he had also taken a very bad fall- related to his Parkinson’s. The combinatio­n gave him and his family a whole new set of hurdles. Not to mention here we see him in his late 50s, dealing with career predicamen­ts, as he continues to take on guest roles in various series; here we see him as a loyal husband and the father of four who are grappling with their unwavering devotion; here we see him in precarious mental health facing his first terrifying episode of psychosis.

Fox makes it through all this with both light humor and deep introspect­ion: The entire book is well woven in a rich tragicomic tapestry. We make it through all the obstacles only for the book to be most heartbreak­ingly tagged with what will likely be a standard of 2020 memoirs: The epilogue that addresses the fact that the book launched amid one of human history’s greatest affliction­s to date - our pandemic - and that we, just like Fox, are still struggling to see a way out.

Occasional­ly the many registers of the memoir fall into disharmony thematical­ly: The dad jokes work well in the voicey-ness of the prose but distract when in, say, chapter-title placement. The introducti­on, for instance, is called “Fall Guy” but the harrowing fall it describes isn’t one that feels right for word play. Similarly, “Exile on Pain Street,” “Breaking Dad” and “Homeland Security” feel slightly crass given the gravity of Fox’s anecdotes. Fox’s writing is at its best when it’s barreling into the demons. A phrase like “I’m taking my time. Time isn’t taking me” works far better than a chapter called “Double Bogey” that begins with the cheeky but ultimately tonally challenged introducti­on, “Why me? Why did this happen? I have a wife and children, a life that I love. So why was I afflicted with golf?”

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