This autobiography is about Bronson’s experiences in jail, of which he has spent more of his life, not due to the original crime, but because his violent tendencies in prison, has caused his terms to keep getting extended. The two times he was set free, he fucked up quickly, landing him in jail again.
The story itself is boring, since Bronson’s life experience is, unfortunately, a waste. He is spending time in prison, some co-prisoner or guard pisses him off, and he gets in a fight with them, and he gets punished. That’s all there is. And while there seems to be some struggles within Bronson to improve himself, life isn’t a movie, he just constantly fails. He repeats the same mistakes constantly.
However, what I find interesting about his character is that it tells us a lot about how a lot of people are. Bronson’s faults are magnified, but I look around at people who, like Bronson, seem to repeat the same mistakes over and over again, and the only person they seem to hurt is themselves. When Bronson seems to be improving, but he gets into another useless fight due to some slight to his pride, you want to grab him and beg him to just chill out, because he is only hurting himself. But Bronson is just an exaggerated version of the millions of people who do the same thing.
Sometimes the best way to win in life, is to lose some battles. Bronson kept losing, because he kept insisting on pyrrhic victories. This is the real lesson of his memoirs.