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Summary
Summary
Early on an April morning, eighteen-year-old Billy Frank Gilley, Jr., killed his sleeping parents. Surprised in the act by his younger sister, Becky, he turned on her as well. Billy then climbed the stairs to the bedroom of his other sister, Jody, and said, "We're free." But is one ever free after an unredeemable act of violence? The Gilley family murders ended a lifetime of physical and mental abuse suffered by Billy and Jody at the hands of their parents. And it required each of the two survivors--one a convicted murderer, the other suddenly an orphan--to create a new identity, a new life. In this mesmerizing book, bestselling writer Kathryn Harrison brilliantly uncovers the true story behind a shocking and unforgettable crime as she explores the impact of escalating violence and emotional abuse visited on the children of a deeply troubled family. With an artistry that recalls Truman Capote'sIn Cold Blood, Norman Mailer'sThe Executioner's Song, and her ownThe Kiss, Harrison reveals the antecedents of the murders--of a crime of such violence that it had the power to sever past from present--and the consequences for Billy and for Jody. Weaving in meditations on her own experience of parental abuse, Harrison searches out answers to the question of how survivors of violent trauma shape a future when their lives have been divided into Before and After. Based on interviews with Billy and Jody as well as with friends, police, and social workers involved in the case,While They Sleptis Kathryn Harrison's unflinching inquiry into the dark heart of violence in an American family, and a personal quest to understand how young people go on after tragedy--to examine the extent as well as the limits of psychic resilience.The New York Times called Kathryn Harrison'sThe Kiss"a powerful piece of writing, a testament to evil and hope." The same could be said aboutWhile They Slept. PRAISE FORWHILE THEY SLEPT "Harrison does a magnificent job of sorting through the heartbreak of a family tragedy. By adding insights into her own life, she brings us a little closer to understanding the resilience of the human spirit and the irrevocable damage and unforeseen consequences of child and sexual abuse." --USA Today "The result of Harrison's masterful embellishment is a fascinating and comprehensive examination of the before and after of a brutal triple murder, of the cyclical nature of violence and of the tragic ineffectiveness of our social support systems…While They Sleptdoes not provide the easy answers we hope to discover in 'just the facts,' but it offers instead the richer and more enduring illumination of 'the story.'" --L.A. Times "Her telling brings moral clarity to the dark fate of a family: the daylight gaze of narrative itself as a form of empathy." --New York Times Book Review,cover review "A powerful account…This excellent book will be devoured by educators who try to come to grips with the lasting effects of the traumas of childhood." --Deseret Morning News "Harrison offers careful research and obvious concern…While They Slept's real horror is in how many potential helpers were aware of the abuse and were unable to help. This is a heartbreaking read." --Rocky Mountain News "Kathryn Harrison pulls the reader through the story of the 1984 triple murder in Medford--our own backyard--with such speed and ex
Reviews (1)
Kirkus Review
Novelist and memoirist Harrison (Envy, 2005, etc.) revisits a 1984 killing. The author conducted six three-hour interviews with Billy Gilley, now serving multiple life sentences after being convicted at age 18 of murdering his abusive parents and younger sister Becky. Harrison also spoke with the surviving sister, Jody, who claimed to have been sexually abused by both Billy and their father. Although Jody managed to rise above her sordid past, eventually graduating from Georgetown and becoming a successful businesswoman, she was guarded in her account of the killings and the troubled family life that preceded it. Harrison tried to bond by revealing that she too had experienced sexual abuse at the hands of her father, but Jody remained wary. Billy proved even more evasive. Arrested for burglary and arson several times before the murders, he argued that he clubbed his parents to death with a baseball bat to rescue himself and Jody from routine beatings and constant psychological abuse. That he was beaten and tormented by both parents seems undeniable, but Billy failed to explain why he went on to kill Becky and sidestepped the question of whether he felt any remorse. Harrison has clearly done diligent research, but she too often resorts to quoting psychological reports and court testimony. Overreaching for connections between her own troubled past and Jody's, she produces an overwrought text that isn't as revelatory as it aspires to be. She does convincingly draw the Gilleys' downward spiral into abuse, alcoholism and violence, a descent with family precedent (Billy's maternal grandmother had shot and killed her cheating husband). But readers may balk at a tawdry tale more depressing than meaningful, populated by characters more pitiable than complex. Worthy enough, but nowhere near the level of such true-crime masterpieces as In Cold Blood. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.