Last Rites
- Lesley Goldthorpe

- Feb 16
- 1 min read

Last Rites feels like sitting across from Ozzy while he tells stories — rambling a little, swerving between hilarious and heartbreaking, and being way more honest than you expect. He talks openly about his health, his regrets, his family, and the insane highs and brutal lows of his career. Some moments are laugh-out-loud funny, others are surprisingly heavy.
What I liked most is how real it feels. Ozzy doesn’t try to make himself look heroic or cleaned-up. He owns his mistakes, admits when he screwed up, and still manages to keep that dark sense of humor running through everything. You really feel the weight of aging, illness, and reflection here — but also the gratitude for having lived such a wild, unforgettable life.
This isn’t just a rock memoir. It’s more like a farewell conversation from a legend who knows exactly where he’s been and isn’t pretending otherwise.



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