Depending on your viewpoint and what you know about Gewirtz, he represents everything that’s right or everything that’s wrong with WWE’s modern TV product. This book does a good job of proving the truth is somewhere in between, but will entertain you even if it doesn’t change your mind. For those who don’t know, Gewirtz was a WWE writer throughout the 2000s, including a lengthy run as the head writer. His a...
While it tells the story of the ultimate in for-the-moment entertainment, this is a memoir that reveals its depths when taken as a whole. For those who don’t remember it’s notoriety from the tape-trading scene of the mid-to-late 90s, Incredibly Strange Wrestling was an unusual San Francisco based promotion where people who didn’t really know how to (professionally) wrestle performed for people who weren’t really ...
Definitely more of a life story than a wrestling book, this should still appeal to Miceli’s fans. While the wrestling career of Madusa is well-known and fondly remembered by many, it’s only part of a live lived to the full, reflected in this story. The book occasionally skips around from subject to subject rather than being a traditional chronological autobiography, but the wrestling section makes up around a third of the content. I...
While a lovely item to own, there’s not enough meat here to make it worth paying over the odds. Wrestling photo books is a niche category and harder to review that traditional titles. This is certainly much better produced and more visually striking than the likes of George Napolitano titles from the 1980s, One Ring Circus or Killer Pics. It’s a similar size and quality to Exquisite Mayhem, though without that title’s&...
Characteristically unconventional, this is a book with an approach that would have worked for few wrestlers. Much of the positive feedback has concentrated on the open and honest approach Moxley takes to the book, combining an authentic voice with an open approach similar to that of the original volumes by Mick Foley and Chris Jericho. It’s fair to say he goes a step further as even the most honest book published by an active WWE ...
One for fans only, this is all breadth and little depth. Michaels has wrestled since the late 80s, chiefly around the East Tennessee and Kentucky areas. While he’s worked for everyone from WWF and WCW to Smoky Mountain and TNA, this doesn’t really have the level of detail you might hope for in a book from an experienced journeyman. Take out the photo section and there’s under 100 pages here, due partly to the fact that...
While the audience for this may be a small sliver of a Venn diagram, it’s surprisingly readable and doesn’t outstay its welcome. Regular readers will know many, if not most, wrestling novels fall into a common theme: a fictionalised version of the territorial era of the 70s and 80s, with (sometimes thinly) veiled versions of the NWA and its touring champion model. Occasionally you’ll have an extra genre in the mix, usu...
At times this feels like three books in one and unfortunately that’s not a benefit. Following Greenberg’s Too Sweet, which chronicled the rise of independent wrestling to the All In show, this covers the period from the emergence of COVID-19 in January 2020 to the return of full crowds at AEW show in Summer 2021. I noted of Too Sweet that it’s early section “often feels a little scattergun, skipping from topic to...
ESPN’s Marc Raimondi is to write a book about the nWo for Simon and Schuster. Titled “For Life: The Inside Story Of Pro-Wrestling’s New World Order, And How It Changed America”, it’s described as: A narrative history of how professional wrestling’s most popular faction impacted and influenced American culture by blurring the lines between reality and entertainment. Raimondi plans to document the book&...
The latest in a line of fictional autobiographies of pro wrestlers, this has plenty of colour but not enough polish. Pierre Von Mercy — whose real name is creatively obscured from the reader — is a former circus strongman who’s recruited into pro wrestling and goes on to be a major star with an NWA-like group of territories. Individually, the incident and anecdotes in the book are lively enough with vivid descriptions....









