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Gone Boy: A Walkabout

AUTHOR: Gregory Gibson
ISBN: 1568362927

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         Editorial Review

Gone Boy: A Walkabout
- Book Review,
by Gregory Gibson


From Publishers Weekly
The recent rash of school shootings makes Gibson's heartbreaking book as timely as it is good. Shortly before Christmas in 1992, an alienated, angry student named Wayne Lo went on a shooting rampage at Simon's Rock College in western Massachusetts, wounding four people and killing two, one of whom was Gibson's 18-year-old son, Galen. While grieving, Gibson embarked on what he calls a "walkabout," a search for the truth about his son's death: "I would concentrate on the details, the facts, and trust that their greater meaning would emerge, of its own accord, in the end. It never occurred to me to doubt that there was a greater meaning." At first, there was Lo's trial to occupy him, followed by a civil suit against the college. Gibson writes honestly about the rage that consumed him for the first few years after Galen's death. In a remarkable chapter, he describes a conversation with Leon Botstein, the president of Bard College, which owns Simon's Rock, in which he realized that assigning blame would serve no practical or spiritual purpose. Not that human fallibility didn't play a huge role in Galen's death: Gibson makes a compelling argument that Simon's Rock administrators had more than enough warning signs to prevent the tragedy. Lo's high-school teachers knew he was troubled. So did his college teachers. And his college friends and administrators knew he had a gun and ammunition. What makes this book special, and what distinguishes it from the blizzard of 30-second explanations and 800-word op-ed pieces on teen violence, is the way in which Gibson transcends his rage and becomes capable of mounting a searching, informative and ultimately deeply moving exploration into the combination of causality and randomness that surrounds his son's death. Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal
On December 14, 1992, during a shooting rampage at Simon's Rock College, Gibson's 18-year-old son, Galen, was shot and killed. In the aftermath, Gibson, an antiquarian bookseller in Gloucester, MA, embarked on this "walkabout" in order to make sense of his grief. His son's murder, he writes, was "a terrible blow and the greatest teaching the world had to offer. It was God's Will, but it had happened in the world and so it had causes....I figured out that if I concentrated on the worldly chain of causes I might finally work my way up to the God's Will part." In the course of his inquiry into guns, violence, privacy, and responsibility, Gibson decides that the real lesson is that we have to find forgiveness and "take the energy this horrible thing had released and turn it around somehow and send it back out there, clean, so the world might be a better place for it." An emotionally moving, important story; recommended for larger public libraries and academic libraries.ARobert C. Jones, formerly of Central Missouri State Univ., Warrensburg Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.


The New York Times Book Review, Jason Zengerle
...a poignant, insightful and admirably honest chronicle of a father's attempts to make sense--in both large and small ways--of his son's murder.


From Kirkus Reviews
A father transforms the attempt to fathom his sons senseless murder into a complex, surprising account of memory and discovery amid dark American corners of insanity, gun violence, and malfeasance. Gibsons staid life as an antiquarian bookseller was demolished by the death of his 18-year-old son, Galen, in a 1992 mass shooting at Simons Rock College by student Wayne Lo. With the school uncommunicative, his family lost to grief, and their civil suit against the college stalemated, he descended into drinking, dark fantasy, and loosed moorings, then ultimately righted himself by embarking upon a (vehicular) walkabout in an effort to understand Galens death. This results in a meandering narrative in which Gibsons propulsive loss is leavened by wry humor and increasing awareness of his situations contemporary singular absurdity. He explores Los path to murder, the ramifications of firearms availability, and the role of the college, law enforcement, and psychology in the cases disposition, always with startling, engrossing results. Though his familys heartbreak at Galens loss makes for tough reading, its to Gibsons credit as a debut author that his rangy prose and concise aggregate of observation draws one in thoroughly. Rarely maudlin, his book resonates with the paradoxical relationship between fathers and sons and the harder-edged interactions among todays confused, rigidly bohemian youth. And his attempts to comprehend the terrible enigma of Wayne Lo are also invaluable, given that Los act is practically a template for the mass shootings that have become a pox on the nation. Yet theres another dark story here: an instance in which present-day hesitancies toward judgment and action result in a catastrophic institutional failure. Gibson finds numerous ways in which college officials thwarted security personnel and missed opportunities to interrupt Lo in his weapon acquisition. (After years of insurance-company wrangling, an undisclosed settlement was reached.) This book should be seriously considered by education professionals, as well as by violence survivors who might benefit from Gibsons singular odyssey. -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.


Boston Magazine, October 1999
. . . Gregory Gibson is a wonderful writer whose work rivals the subtleties of Norman Mailer's best fiction. He is a wonderful reporter. But his spiritual strength and openness through his ordeal is why, as Gibson says, "the story redeems the experience."


New York Times Book Review, October 24, 1999
..."Gone Boy" is mercifully devoid of political polemics or grand pronouncements on what's wrong with kids today. Instead, Gibson, an antiquarian bookseller and first time author, has produced a poignant, insightful and admirably honest chronicle of a father's attempts to make sense--in both large and small ways--of his son's murder.... When Gibson apologizes to one of his many interview subjects for his persistent questions, the interviewee brushes him off, telling him, "You're just being a good dad." That in the process Gibson has also written an excellent book is so much the better.


Time Magazine, October 4, 1999
Gregory Gibson and I met 36 years ago as freshmen at Swarthmore College. Greg was 18--the same age his elder son Galen had reached in 1992 when he was slaughtered in an act of senseless violence. Galen was in his second year at Simon's Rock College in Great Barrington, Mass., when a fellow student named Wayne Lo went beserk and shot up the campus with a cheap imported rifle, killing Galen and a teacher and wounding four others. Ever since then, Greg has struggled to wrest some meaning from this tragedy, and I think he has succeeded. His powerful book about Galen's murder, GONE BOY: A WALKABOUT, will be published this week. It is must reading for everyone troubled by the epidemic of shootings, such as the recent one in Fort Worth, Texas, that have left so many teenagers dead. It is especially challenging for those who oppose stricter gun control."--Jack E. White


Review
"Poignant, insightful, and admirably honest. . . . An excellent book."          --The New York Times Book Review

"Powerful . . . must reading for everyone troubled by the epidemic of shootings." --Time

"Gone Boy is not merely a book; it's a journey you experience. You will never read a more honest book, and honestly, it changed me."  --Gavin de Becker, author of The Gift of Fear
  
"Sad, sometimes funny, beautifully written . . . and ultimately triumphant."
--The Atlanta Journal-Constitution


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         Book Review

Gone Boy: A Walkabout
- Book Reviews,
by Gregory Gibson

Gone Boy: A Walkabout: A Father's Search for the Truth in His Son's Murder

FROM THE PUBLISHER

With a New Afterword

When Greg Gibson's oldest son, Galen—eighteen, bright, unique, full of promise—was shot and killed by a fellow student at his school, Gibson found himself undertaking an unusual, highly personal investigation to discover the truth about his son's murder. He felt he owed it to his son, and he knew the process would help save his own sanity.

Gibson's journey begins with a visit to the man who sold the killer the gun and builds to an astonishing interview with the killer's parents—hardworking Taiwanese immigrants as anguished as the Gibsons about their own "gone boy." Along the way, he meets investigators, lawyers, psychiatrists, conspiracy theorists, bureaucrats, and more than a few lost souls.

An important exploration of gun violence in America, this unforgettable book shows a man talking his way out of grief with toughness, honesty, and a sense of humor as dry and bracing as a shot of good whisky. It also tells the unsentimental story of a family moving beyond rage to an understanding of the human heart.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

The recent rash of school shootings makes Gibson's heartbreaking book as timely as it is good. Shortly before Christmas in 1992, an alienated, angry student named Wayne Lo went on a shooting rampage at Simon's Rock College in western Massachusetts, wounding four people and killing two, one of whom was Gibson's 18-year-old son, Galen. While grieving, Gibson embarked on what he calls a "walkabout," a search for the truth about his son's death: "I would concentrate on the details, the facts, and trust that their greater meaning would emerge, of its own accord, in the end. It never occurred to me to doubt that there was a greater meaning." At first, there was Lo's trial to occupy him, followed by a civil suit against the college. Gibson writes honestly about the rage that consumed him for the first few years after Galen's death. In a remarkable chapter, he describes a conversation with Leon Botstein, the president of Bard College, which owns Simon's Rock, in which he realized that assigning blame would serve no practical or spiritual purpose. Not that human fallibility didn't play a huge role in Galen's death: Gibson makes a compelling argument that Simon's Rock administrators had more than enough warning signs to prevent the tragedy. Lo's high-school teachers knew he was troubled. So did his college teachers. And his college friends and administrators knew he had a gun and ammunition. What makes this book special, and what distinguishes it from the blizzard of 30-second explanations and 800-word op-ed pieces on teen violence, is the way in which Gibson transcends his rage and becomes capable of mounting a searching, informative and ultimately deeply moving exploration into the combination of causality and randomness that surrounds his son's death. (Oct.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

On December 14, 1992, during a shooting rampage at Simon's Rock College, Gibson's 18-year-old son, Galen, was shot and killed. In the aftermath, Gibson, an antiquarian bookseller in Gloucester, MA, embarked on this "walkabout" in order to make sense of his grief. His son's murder, he writes, was "a terrible blow and the greatest teaching the world had to offer. It was God's Will, but it had happened in the world and so it had causes....I figured out that if I concentrated on the worldly chain of causes I might finally work my way up to the God's Will part." In the course of his inquiry into guns, violence, privacy, and responsibility, Gibson decides that the real lesson is that we have to find forgiveness and "take the energy this horrible thing had released and turn it around somehow and send it back out there, clean, so the world might be a better place for it." An emotionally moving, important story; recommended for larger public libraries and academic libraries.--Robert C. Jones, formerly of Central Missouri State Univ., Warrensburg Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Megan Harlan

In 1992, the authors teenage son was murdered during a random shooting spree by an extremely disturbed fellow student Wayne Lo, at their small Massachusets college, Simon's Rock...Only when he establishes a friendship with the other gone boy's parents—the Lo's, distraught by their son's crime and lifelong imprisonment—does Gibson finally transcend his own grief in this wrenching, cathartic memoir.

Entertainment Weekly

Kirkus Reviews

A father transforms the attempt to fathom his son's senseless murder into a complex, surprising account of memory and discovery amid dark American corners of insanity, gun violence, and malfeasance. Gibson's staid life as an antiquarian bookseller was demolished by the death of his 18-year-old son, Galen, in a 1992 mass shooting at Simon's Rock College by student Wayne Lo. With the school uncommunicative, his family lost to grief, and their civil suit against the college stalemated, he descended into drinking, dark fantasy, and loosed moorings, then ultimately righted himself by embarking upon a (vehicular) "walkabout" in an effort to understand Galen's death. This results in a meandering narrative in which Gibson's propulsive loss is leavened by wry humor and increasing awareness of his situation's contemporary singular absurdity. He explores Lo's path to murder, the ramifications of firearms availability, and the role of the college, law enforcement, and psychology in the case's disposition, always with startling, engrossing results. Though his family's heartbreak at Galen's loss makes for tough reading, it's to Gibson's credit as a debut author that his rangy prose and concise aggregate of observation draws one in thoroughly. Rarely maudlin, his book resonates with the paradoxical relationship between fathers and sons and the harder-edged interactions among today's confused, rigidly bohemian youth. And his attempts to comprehend the terrible enigma of Wayne Lo are also invaluable, given that Lo's act is practically a template for the mass shootings that have become a pox on the nation. Yet there's another dark story here: an instance in which present-day hesitancies towardjudgment and action result in a catastrophic institutional failure. Gibson finds numerous ways in which college officials thwarted security personnel and missed opportunities to interrupt Lo in his weapon acquisition. (After years of insurance-company wrangling, an undisclosed settlement was reached.) This book should be seriously considered by education professionals, as well as by violence survivors who might benefit from Gibson's singular odyssey.




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