More fool me

Stephen Fry, 1957-

Book - 2015

"By his early thirties, Stephen Fry--writer, comedian, star of stage and screen--had, as they say, "made it." Much loved on British television, author of a critically acclaimed and bestselling first novel, with a glamorous and glittering cast of friends, he had more work than was perhaps good for him. As the '80s drew to a close, he began to burn the candle at both ends. Writing and recording by day, and haunting a neverending series of celebrity parties, drinking dens, and poker games by night, he was a high functioning addict. He was so busy, so distracted by the high life, that he could hardly see the inevitable, headlong tumble that must surely follow. Filled with raw, electric extracts from his diaries of the time, ...More Fool Me is a brilliant, eloquent account by a man driven to create and to entertain--revealing a side to him he has long kept hidden"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : The Overlook Press 2015.
©2014
Language
English
Main Author
Stephen Fry, 1957- (-)
Physical Description
388 pages, [40] pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781468311334
  • Chapter One
  • Catch-up
  • Very Naughty, but... in the Right Spirit
  • Moral or Medical?
  • The Early Days
  • Notes from a Showbusiness Career
  • Living the Life
  • Dear Diary
  • Postarse
  • Illustrations
Review by Booklist Review

Comedian, actor, novelist, and director Fry's honestly worn, familiar face smiles sincerely from this memoir's cover, making readers feel he has nothing to hide he'll here bare all he hasn't uncovered in The Fry Chronicles (2012). Indeed, he is up front about his (now ended) cocaine habit, which formed a part of his life at a time when he rigorously did voice-overs in the mornings, wrote radio and TV sketches (and more) in the afternoons, made appearances in between, and then had dinner and partied with friends and notables. Fry notes, looking back, How I managed to do so much working and so much playing without keeling over stone dead I cannot imagine. The latter half of the book is his 1993 diary (unrevised but occasionally annotated for clarification), and it forms a mesmerizing cadence and backdrop to his charmed and charmingly told life. Fry's funny stories and the many photographs reproduced throughout complement how incredibly accomplished he is and how much he seemingly effortlessly produces. Fry is impeccably cheery. This memoir makes one laugh, but it also inspires.--Kinney, Eloise Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

"There is nothing very appealing about show business memoirs," comedian Fry writes in the first sentence of this new installment of his autobiography, which picks up where The Fry Chronicles left off. With canny accuracy, Fry illustrates his point in what is ultimately a meandering, pedantic memoir that covers about a decade of his life. Fry found himself at the height of his success as a comedian and actor in his early 30s, rushing from party to party, diving into cocaine addiction and sex. In one lucid moment, however, Fry comes to himself and recognizes the line between wisdom and folly: "When I started taking coke my life was more or less perfect. I had enjoyed preposterous success." Fry does veer off his path momentarily to recall his meeting with Princess Diana, who revealed her secret love of a particularly naughty television show, as well as to introduce his sister, Jo, who became his superlative personal assistant. Looking back over his diaries, Fry wonders about his folly as a young man and where his life might have led if he had not partied so heavily. In the end, though, Fry imparts little wisdom about himself. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Fry brings his life story into the next decade in this pleasing follow-up to The Fry Chronicles (2012) and other books of memoir. It's not that he's self-absorbed but rather that the author has packed plenty of lives into less than 60 years: intellectual and criminal, genius and addict, beset by countless maladies but always game to wander off onto mountaintop or into jungle in the service of adventure. Viewers of BBC America will now know him as the host of QI, fans of the Hobbit films will know him as a gold-crazed lakeside doge, and fans with longer memories will remember him from A Bit of Fry and Laurie (with House's Hugh Laurie) and other confectionsto all of which Fry adds that he's a "representative of madness, Twitter, homosexuality, atheism, annoying ubiquity and whatever other kinds of activity you might choose to associate with me." With so much to tell, it's a touch disappointing that Fry drifts from coherent narrative to sometimes less-than-scintillating diary entries. There's also perhaps a bit more about the agonies and ecstasies of cocaine than one might care to read ("As my prosperity rose my ability to acquire higher-quality cocaine increased commensurately.Better purity meant less diarrhea, nasal bleeding and nausea")though that was the late 1980s and early '90s for you, a time of excess and abandon that today's grim austerity makes all the more nostalgiaworthy. Fry, a gifted writer with a perfect sense of comic timing and anecdote-spinning, name-drops to beat Jim Harrison, but what a list of names he has to drop: from Emma Thompson to Alastair Cooke, P.G. Wodehouse, John Mills, Christopher Hitchens, and the Prince of Wales. If you're a fan of Oscar Wilde, whom Fry has portrayed on stage and screen, then by near definition you'll be a fan of this writer and this book. Lots of funand readers who have been following all along will be wanting more, and soon. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.