ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 11月14日 07時30分
When it comes to living with uncertainty, Michael J. Fox is a pro.
For a certain consumer of Generation X pop culture, @realmikejfox calls to mind “Family Ties” in prime time, “Back to the Future” in movie theaters, interviews in Tiger Beat. But 2 years ago, the actor and activist, who has been living with Parkinson’s disease for nearly 3 decades, had surgery to remove a benign tumor on his spinal cord and had to learn to walk all over again.
Four months later, he fell in the kitchen of his Upper East Side home and fractured his arm so badly that it had to be stabilized with 19 pins and a plate. Mired in grueling, back-to-back recoveries, he started to wonder if he had oversold the idea of hope in his first 3 memoirs: “Lucky Man,” “Always Looking Up” and “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Future.”
“I had this kind of crisis of conscience,” Fox said during a video interview last month from his Manhattan office, where pictures of Tracy Pollan, his wife of 31 years, and his dog, Gus, hung behind him. “I thought, What have I been telling people? I tell people it’s all going to be OK — and it might suck!”
His solution was to channel that honesty into a fourth memoir, “No Time Like the Future.” The energy that made him such a riveting presence onscreen comes through in his new book, which Flatiron is publishing on Nov. 17.
Tap the link in our bio to read the full interview with Fox from @nytbooks. Photo by @celestesloman
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2020/11/14