Tim Fountain came to know Quentin Crisp intimately during the last year
of his life whilst researching his stage play about him, Resident Alien.
Crisp died before he got a chance to see the play. Here he tells the
story of that year; looking at the life and lasting legacy of one of the
wittiest and most controversial figures of the last century, and
shedding light on the intriguing events leading up to his death. It is a
compelling portrait of what Fountain calls a 'great, glittering
contradiction': a man who flaunted his sexuality at a time when the
penalty for homosexual activity was jail, a man whose very name
epitomized style, yet who lived alone in abject poverty in a room he
simply refused to clean, and a man who confidently declared at the
height of the AIDS epidemic that he didn't believe it existed.