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As the nation and the world mourn the loss of famed singer and entertainer Tony Bennett, some are going back to his own carefully written words to refresh themselves on — and to reflect on — the many aspects of his memorable personal story. 

In his autobiography published in the late 1990s, "The Good Life," written by Tony Bennett with Will Friedwald, Bennett told the world, "I've been asked many times why I haven't written my life story before."

The reason, said Bennett, was that "I'm not the type of person who likes to look backward."

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Rather, he wrote, "I've always felt compelled to move forward, and I've never been one to dwell in the past."

However, as he went on to note in "The Good Life," published by Atria Books/Simon & Schuster, there came a change of heart on this point.

Singer Tony Bennett is pictured

Singer Tony Bennett holds his Grammy Award for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance for "Tony Bennett on Holiday" on Feb. 25, 1998, in New York. (MATT CAMPBELL/AFP via Getty Images)

"The pieces of my life have begun to fall into place like an intricate mosaic," he wrote.

To that end, he noted, "I've learned that no matter how tough the struggle of day-to-day living, with enough dedication and patience I will persevere and accomplish my goals, no matter how unattainable they may at first seem."

"I consider my grandparents … to be the most courageous of people."

Among many other insights and stories he shared, Bennett gave major nods to his family members, many of whom left Calabria, Italy, for the United States — the land of new beginnings and great opportunity.

Singer Tony Bennett is pictured

Towering Performance Award recipient singer Tony Bennett attends the Annual Songwriters Hall of Fame Awards ceremony and dinner at the Marriott Marquis, on June 12, 2003, in New York City.  (Evan Agostini/Getty Images)

"I consider my grandparents, as well as the many immigrants before and after them, to be the most courageous of people," Bennett wrote. 

"It astounds me even to contemplate what it meant for them to leave behind everything they knew" to come to the United States, he added. 

"I never imagined I'd be fortunate enough to become as successful as I have."

His grandparents spent three weeks crossing the Atlantic to get to America, he said.

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"They journeyed across the ocean without any idea of what they'd find on the other side, and none of them had ever ventured more than a few miles from the spot where they were born," he said.

Singer Tony Bennett is pictured

Columbia recording artist Tony Bennett as a young teen idol. Members of his family left their native Italy for the challenging trip across the Atlantic Ocean to get to the United States to start a new life.   (Bettmann/Getty Images)

"It must have been terrifying, knowing that they would never see their childhood homes, or their own parents, again."

In the book, he detailed how his grandfather, once here and settled, started a wholesale fruit-and-vegetable business "catering to the pushcart owners."

"I could sense how much she suffered to make a meager living."

Wrote Bennett, "My grandfather got up early in the morning every day and worked until the sun went down. He wasn't much at numbers, so he let my grandmother handle all the money."

He continued, "At the end of the day, he gave her whatever he'd earned, and she paid all the bills and stashed whatever was left over in an old trunk she kept hidden under their bed." 

He also wrote, "I never imagined I'd be fortunate enough to become as successful as I have."

Tony Bennett book

Tony Bennett's book "The Good Life" was originally published in the late 1990s. The book includes the iconic singer's vivid memories during his childhood of his beloved mother bent over her sewing machine in the family's tiny home as she tried to sew as many dresses as possible to bring in much-needed money.  (Simon & Schuster)

His family's original name, Benedetto, he also noted, "means the blessed one."

And "I feel that I have been truly blessed."

This, despite his Depression-era childhood and more — including his vivid memories of his beloved mother, a seamstress, bent over her machine in their tiny home trying to sew as many dresses as possible, he recounted.

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The more dresses she made — the more money she earned for her family. 

"I loved her so much, and I felt so sorry for her because she always seemed worried," he wrote.

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"I could sense how much she suffered to make a meager living."