Enjoyable if a bit odd. The first part is quite religious (I don't know why that should surprise me, on reflection); it's entitled "honest doubt", and shows what one might call the nonconformist conscience at work as the background to Tony Benn's life and the influences on his thought; the second part is autobiographical, describing childhood, parents, how he met his wife &c., with some very funny moments - a precursor to the diaries with just a little overlap - and the third part is selections from speeches mainly from his later career, designed to demonstrate where he had arrived from the points described in parts 1 & 2. (Ithink that more or less sums it up). The speeches are at times a bit long-winded but it's worth persevering for the sudden flashes of enlightenment. A reflective book, mostly looking back, but occasionally looking forwards with some surprisingly accurate predictions (and one great colossal mistake, when he thinks that the end of Mrs. Thatcher's career is the end of Thatcherism). The title of the book comes from a Salvation Army hymn.