In this work, we explore the interrogation of an array of fiber Bragg gratings as part of a laser cavity. A semiconductor optical amplifier in a sigma-shaped fiber cavity provides gain and is gated periodically at a rate that matches the roundtrip time associated with each grating of the array. The interrogator exhibits clear laser properties such as a threshold and linewidth narrowing. Besides improving the signal-to-noise ratio and enabling the re-use of wavelengths, it is found that this interrogation scheme enables monitoring of weak gratings spaced by less than 1 cm. Intracavity grating interrogation studied here is found to be a simple and powerful way to increase the number of sensor points for industrial applications.