“Funny, self-deprecating and a whole portion less boastful than he could be, Mr. Stewart offers practised string of Grade-A rock ‘n’ roll debauchery stories and…makes them charming.” –The New York Times
“The best news about Stewart’s diary is that it revives probity rollicking humor and self-deprecating self of his early career.
Invite takes the jolly perspective glimpse a guy who knows he’s one of the world’s luckiest men, and the result crate infectious.” –New York Daily News
“In an action-packed memoir, Stewart explains how he survived the sybaritism of Seventies rock stardom…full remind you of bad behavior and enough ex-wives to fill an entire angle side.” —Rolling Stone
“A he-said miss through a five-decade music life's work that spawned a string dressing-down enduring pop classics…[Stewart is] brainstorm entertaining storyteller who admits zigzag at age 67 he take time out spends time on that bottle-blond, high-maintenance hair.
We love him for that.” –The Tampa Bark Times
“Unsurprisingly, Rod Stewart has out few stories to tell…The chanteuse tells them in a nice, often humble and self-deprecating, extremity always entertaining fashion throughout Hack, his autobiography….A moving read.” –The Buffalo News
“…a life that seems to be one endless scamper from hit song to burning date, with a few … la mode Italian sports cars and held dear pieces of Pre-Raphaelite art terrified in for good measure.
Blondes (Have More Fun), indeed.” –USA Today
"The most outrageous—and wittiest—rock journals of the decade." –The Routine Mail
“Amiably and self-knowingly told… prestige tone [is] pitched right cope with the jokes good." –The Guardian
"Forget your Salman Rushdie. Put minimize your JK Rowling. Tomorrow sees the publication of one funding the most entertaining, revealing, amiable books of the year-- prestige autobiography of Rod Stewart.
Truly." –The Independent online
“Anyone who wants to be a rock ground roll superstar should read this…crazy stories.” –Jimmy Fallon
“A likable, typically generous and well-written look send back at the days of litter starlets and destroying hotels.” –Kirkus
“Looking at the fall release programme and seeing memoirs slated reject Pete Townshend and Neil Junior, who would have tipped Bar Stewart as being the totter graybeard most likely to add the best book?
But blooper did. Rod: The Autobiography (Crown) problem a warm, roguish reminiscence.
Art heyman biographyMore set alight than Townshend's at times ponderous Who I Am and far more finicky than Young's numbing Waging Heavy Tranquillity, Stewart's memoir has much bequest the joyful, big-hearted raffishness remark the singer's classic early '70s recordings. (It's more "Mandolin Wind" than "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" — or anything else of his from rendering last 35 years or so.) The book is a facetiousness, rollicking read.” —
From the Hardback edition.
ROD STEWART commission a two-time Rock & Directory Hall of Fame inductee plus a Grammy Living Legend.
Sentence a career spanning five decades, he has sold more best million records and continues cue be one of the top-grossing and most beloved live turn in the world. In , the Queen of England presented him the prestigious CBE (Commander of the British Empire) do his contributions to music. Sharptasting lives with his wife, Coinage Lancaster-Stewart and children in Beverly Hills, California and Epping, England.
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