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Bennett served in the Army in Germany during World War II and marched for civil rights with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in Alabama in 1965. He writes about witnessing many incidents of prejudice that pained him and reinforced his beliefs in peace and tolerance. Chapter headings include "War Is Insanity" and "Everything Should Be Done With Love." Bennett's style is conversational and full of cliches, but readers can almost hear his distinctive cadence as he waxes nostalgic. He has sung for every president since Dwight Eisenhower (Bill Clinton was his favorite), and pages of celebrity photos and tidbits read like a who's who of show business. Although he admits using drugs in the past, when mourning the loss of greats like Amy Winehouse, his Zen advice is clear: "To take drugs is to sin against one's talent." Readers looking for a straight autobiography should go back to Bennett's earlier books as this memoir paints only broad strokes of his life experience and glosses over his down times. He only briefly mentions his divorces and drug abuse, and the tone is profoundly positive. Critics may find the book preachy and Bennett's list of accomplishments and sunny outlook self-indulgent, but the celebrity and career anecdotes will likely appeal to fans.
[Associated
Press;
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