PositiveThe Evening Standard... the former Reggie Dwight has already lived his life as an open book, so his memoir doesn’t feel like a collection of secrets shared for the first time. He could have dispelled a few myths but instead finds fun in declaring that he’s exactly as awful as you thought ... could be twice as long but is mercifully free of technical details about recording sessions, and covers the extravagance with pace and hilarity. Towards the end, his feelings about first-time fatherhood at 63 leave a warm glow, and there’s a reassurance that although he’s retiring from touring, his career is not over. It feels like there are lots of outlandish tales still to tell.