One variation on the popular Internet meme about Chuck Norris and his toughness is that "You don't find Chuck Norris; Chuck Norris finds you." That might be said of this book, which I picked up at a used bookstore more than a year ago but finished reading recently, at a time when its "never give up" message has more resonance for me than it otherwise might.
This is part autobiography, part pep talk, and all written in a conversational style that Chuck's coauthor had the sense to leave alone. A proofreading error ("Marine Corp" without the trailing "s") bothered me, and the chronology of events described here sometimes doubles back on itself. For example, Gena Norris is first mentioned in the chapter about the TV series "Walker: Texas Ranger". Chuck and Gena were introduced to each other by a mutual friend at that time, but the "Walker" chapter precedes the "Soul Mate" chapter where Chuck describes meeting Gena, the woman who would become his second wife. Similarly, Norris makes its home in Dallas but owns several properties, and there are times where readers might suppose that something happened in Texas when it did not, because the narrative later mentions that Chuck was somewhere else at the time.
Parts of the book have probably been sanitized for the sake of increasing its audience. Nevertheless, Chuck Norris, despite his flaws, seems to be a man of integrity. He's also a Christian, so it's quite possible that he really did ask security guards to escort a homeless woman off a TV set by instructing them to "remove that dear lady."
I do not mean to imply that the book is seriously flawed, or that Chuck never steps out of his reputation as an actor and martial arts icon. In fact, Chuck is honest throughout. His fans would expect nothing less, and in this 2004 memoir, Chuck does not let us down. It would be harder to say the same about his coauthor and his editor, who may perhaps have been charmed by his earnestness. Even so, the book remains a good read, and in many ways, an inspiring one. I'm glad I read it.