Cat on the road to findout

Yusuf Islam, 1948-

Book - 2025

From 1960s pop stardom to spiritual awakening, Cat Stevens traces the extraordinary journey of one of music's most beloved artists. Rising to fame with hits like "Wild World" and "Father and Son," Stevens' career was transformed by a near-fatal illness that sparked a lifelong search for meaning. His exploration of faith and philosophy ultimately led him to Islam, a new name--Yusuf Islam--and a life devoted to peace, family, and humanitarian work. This inspiring story follows his evolution from chart-topping singer to spiritual seeker and global advocate for compassion.

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
Surrey, England : Genesis50 Publications [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Yusuf Islam, 1948- (author)
Other Authors
Cat Stevens, 1948- (-)
Physical Description
x, 554 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 541-552).
ISBN
9781917734004
  • The roof
  • Brown-eyed handsome baby
  • The old schoolyard
  • Jesus vs. Superman
  • The scene
  • A cat is born
  • The Decca daze
  • I got experienced
  • I think I see
  • The redroom
  • As clouds parted
  • Tillerman goes tothe USA
  • The Bodhi tree
  • Bull and the polar bear
  • Exile
  • Wave
  • The gift
  • Joseph's story
  • The golden dome
  • Shahadah
  • Back to earth
  • New cultural home
  • Last love song
  • Year of the child
  • Where do the children pray?
  • Trouble
  • Call to alms
  • Hampstead to the Holy
  • Satanic forces
  • Paradise beneath her feet
  • Peace camp: Between East and West
  • A new millennium
  • Hijacked
  • A guitar comes home
  • On stage again
  • Prrr ... Grrr
  • An other cup
  • Shamsia
  • All aboard!
  • Road to findout
  • An unspoken poem.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The renowned singer-songwriter recounts a life of making music and following a religious path. Cat Stevens is known for several things, among them anthems such as "Wild World," "Morning Has Broken," and "Peace Train." Those songs, he writes, came to him after a shattered first career as a pop singer, which left him "all burned out at the age of nineteen, after only sixteen months: show business had done its worst and had made me well and truly sick to death." Ill with tuberculosis, he read up on Asian religions, following in the path of George Harrison, a strong early influence, then retreated to his parents' home and began to pour out the songs that would make him internationally famous. As Stevens recounts, that fame never quite sat well with him, and his spiritual wanderings brought him to Islam in the late 1970s, when he changed his name to Yusuf Islam and took a long hiatus away from music, including selling all his instruments in the belief that music was "un-Islamic and downright sinful." It was in this third phase that Stevens became known for something else: his apparent support for the clerical fatwa that condemned Salman Rushdie to death for his bookThe Satanic Verses. Stevens protests that he was misunderstood: "Even if the generally accepted view of capital punishment for the crime of insulting the Prophet was absolutely valid, vigilantism was inimical and outlawed by the teachings of Islam." The "absolutely valid" bit is a little troubling, but suffice it to say that the singer eventually decided that music wasn't so evil after all, now in the belief that "one main aim of music, as I see it, is to make the world a happier, more harmonious place for us to live in together." A thoughtful memoir that goes a long way in explaining the author's evolution as musician and religious seeker. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.