Article continues below advertisementCat Stevens has finally laid bare his near-misses with death - as well as his drug-fueled visions and dramatic conversion to Islam - in a sprawling autobiography that portrays a music icon who has been dodging disaster since childhood.The singer-songwriter's new memoir Cat: On the Road to Findout - named after a track from his 1970 hit album Tea for the Tillerman - charts how Steven Demetre Georgiou, born "on the full moon of July 1948" above his parents' café in London's West End, morphed into Cat Stevens, global troubadour, and later Yusuf Islam, the dev...