Spoiler alert: this autobiography ends in 1986. Dio still had almost 25 years to live at that time, but by the time he decided to start writing in the late 00s, the clock sadly ran out and he could only get to the mid-1980s before he died of cancer in 2010. However, what he did write here is mostly worth your time to read, even if the revelations are rarely Earth-shattering, and the 'angle' remains fairly consistent with the way Dio told his own story in interviews over the years. The prose is entertaining, with the right amount of wink-wink embellishment that makes any tale well-told. Were Dio alive today, he'd be doing evening readings on a book tour and regaling eager fans with his stories, and they'd love it. Dio was always a skilled entertainer and this book fits right into that brand.
However, the attraction to this book for me was always the tantalizing prospect that…finally…we would get a deep dive, by the man himself, into the career he had before becoming internationally famous in the mid 1970s fronting Ritchie Blackmore’s Rainbow. Importantly, following the Rainbow experience in 1978, Dio banked his continued professional success on having to obscure, hide, and even lie about the 15 years of his career and personal life before Rainbow. Wendy Dio has taken credit for this strategy in other sources, and Dio played along with both well-practiced and convincing consistency over the years, on- and off-stage.
The World Wide Web knew about that earlier career though, and a Dio fan who stumbled across the first Elf album (1972) could begin quite a journey down a musical rabbit hole very different from the metal singer they thought they knew. Indeed, Dio's former bandmates from those years were willing to flesh out their shared history, but, still, questions remained that really only Dio could answer whenever he finally decided to really come clean. This book promised to be all that, but in the end it disappoints in that area. Dammit.
For example, you'll find much better (more explicit) historical information about Dio's musical career in James Curl's biography of Dio. Granted, Dio chose to write his own book based on stories of his life, not explicit chronology, and that's fine - his life, his book, his choices. Sadly, the result is the same kind of vibe as his interviews, even though he's no longer hiding the existence and depth of that earlier career. Most of the book covers things up to 1975, and it's good that he's writing in the open about what happened in those years. For example, he is quite candid about the tragic accident that killed Nick Pantas and the immediate aftermath, both psychological and physical.
He's still hiding things though. For example, the way the Prophets band from the early and mid-60s was really about giving Dio a chance to become a teen idol superstar, a la Frankie Valli and other Italian-American singers of the day. Incredibly, he’s also hiding the story of his first marriage and the adoption of a son - there's no contemplation of how that marriage affected his life and, bizarrely, no mention at all of his son. He's also still hiding his age - no mention of his birthdate! - and why he chose to lie about it for so long. Perhaps that’s a nudge-nudge-wink-wink strategy on his part to knowing readers like me? And he's still hiding a deep-seated self-centeredness that keeps any familial ties, outside of Wendy, at arms length. Again: it’s his life, his book, his choices.
But those choices we read in this book also reflect a man unwilling to grapple with personal issues that might be too 'messy'. A book like this is the place to grapple with them though, and it's especially disappointing to encounter these absences in a book written by a man in his mid-60s and explicitly labelled on the front cover as "The Autobiography".