This book doesn't translate well to Kindle. The main reason being that there are a lot of photographs in it. Whilst you can alter the font size on a Kindle, to my knowledge you can't get it to zoom in to a photograph. So I found the detail in a lot of them was lost, which was a pity. Also, the author mentions the colours in some of them so I'm assuming at least some of them were printed in colour in the hard copy book. Again, this doesn't help the translation to Kindle unless you have a Kindle Fire. Some of the photos are of documents or posters, and again because of the screen size on a Kindle, you can't actually see any of the detail. There are also some montages of up to 15-20 photos, again too small to see properly.
The text was awkwardly arranged around the photo pages, in some cases resulting in parts of sentences going missing which I found offputting.
Most of all though, I was disappointed in this book because of what it didn't say. Yes Joanna Lumley has had an interesting life and has appeared in a lot of films, plays, TV series, travel and wildlife documentaries and has campaigned for various causes, e.g. giving rights to the Ghurkas to live in the UK. But what it was lacking in was much personal detail and at times just degenerated into a long list of the work she'd done and who she'd worked with. Very little in the way of anecdotes or personal touches. As an example, the fact that she had a son quite young is mentioned almost in passing, then we're off on to the next list of what she worked on. She doesn't again discuss her son, what it was like struggling to bring him up as a single parent, often having to travel or work odd hours. No discussion on her feelings about being a mother etc etc. She does come back to this at the end of the book, but it's only a brief summary and doesn't go into much detail.
I appreciate not everyone likes to share their intimate details with the general public, but she is after all trying to sell her story and if you take too many personal details out, then you're left with not much more than her CV, which I could have googled.