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==Content== The memoir spans Orzabal's life from his formative years in [[Bath, Somerset]], where he met future bandmate [[Curt Smith]] in their early teens, through the formation of their first group [[Graduate]] and the founding of Tears for Fears in 1981. It covers the band's breakthrough with ''[[The Hurting]]'' (1983) and the international phenomenon of ''[[Songs from the Big Chair]]'' (1985), which produced the US number-one singles "Shout" and "Everybody Wants to Rule the World" and made the duo mainstays of American radio and [[MTV]]. A significant portion of the book addresses the creative and personal breakdown of Orzabal's relationship with Smith that led to the band dissolving in 1991, and the years that followed in which Orzabal continued under the Tears for Fears name alone. The memoir then covers the pair's reunion around 2000 and the recording of subsequent albums, including the long and troubled development of ''The Tipping Point'', which was begun before the death of Orzabal's first wife and completed after it. The book also addresses episodes from Orzabal's personal life that he has not previously disclosed publicly. According to its publisher's description, it includes stories of musical and creative triumph alongside dark periods involving grief and drug addiction β experiences Orzabal describes as never having shared before. The memoir concludes with his reflections on love, faith, and recovery, and the role that music played in his healing. ===Astrological framework=== Orzabal, a lifelong devotee of [[astrology]], uses his own astrological chart as a structural device throughout the book. The memoir is billed as an "astrological memoir" β an unusual genre framing β with Orzabal drawing on planetary positions and astrological events to contextualise key moments in his life and career, and to illustrate how he believes the stars have shaped his path. This approach reflects a perspective Orzabal has long expressed publicly, describing astrology as central to his worldview and creative identity.
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