Jump to content
Pro Wrestling Only

Under-the-radar wrestling book recommendations


Cross Face Chicken Wing

Recommended Posts

If you haven't picked it up yet, JR's first book is $4.95 (plus $4 shipping no matter how much you order (in the US)) at Hamilton Books. Hamilton is a great place to order from. They ship to prisoners which is a huge pain in the ass, so throw some support to them. They for sure helped keep me sane during my time in the Feds. (They also have some wrestling DVDs and Blu-ray's for cheap. I grabbed the WWE Madison Square Garden blu for like $5 and something called the 1983 Portland Yearbook Vol. 1 for $4. All 3 for a little over $20 after tax and shipping, plus they arrived in 4 days. Can't beat that.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 373
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

  • 4 weeks later...
  • 4 weeks later...
1 hour ago, JRH said:

So has anyone read "We Promised You A Great Main Event: An Unauthorized WWE History" by Bill Hanstock? I came across it while surfing Amazon, but I'd like to know if it's worth reading for longtime fans, or is it basically stuff we already know?

I haven't but you'd probably find this review helpful: https://www.postwrestling.com/2020/11/08/book-review-we-promised-you-a-great-main-event/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, bobholly138 said:

Yea it sounded pretty good. The author send us a copy of the book. Next time I see the co-host I'm getting the book.

Cool, will grab a copy. Never really did a deep dive on World Class, figure this would be an interesting era to check out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...
  • 2 weeks later...
16 minutes ago, JRH said:

If you have the Hoopla app they have a small number of wrestling books, including the autobiographies for Patterson, Bill Apter, Bob Holly, Bruce Hart, Jim Ross, Luger, Shawn's second, and Snuka.

I do have Hoopla, so nice tip! How do you read the books though? I assume through the Hoopla app on a tablet, with no way to get them on a Kindle like you can do with Overdrive/Libby?

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I can't really call this a 'recommendation' because you'd have to have a lot of free time and be really stubborn to go through with this without reading Japanese, but it would definitely be under-the-radar so far as this board is concerned. For the past week, I've been transcribing (chapter by chapter, and then feeding that text into DeepL) a 2020 Jumbo bio written by former Gong editor Kagehiro Osano. I'm seventy pages in now (of just under 600), and I've received a lot of good info. Very tedious process, sure; the app I'm using only reads up to four characters at a time, and you have to check their accuracy yourself (and, horror of horrors, sometimes you'll still probably need to hunker down and search for a particular kanji yourself online to copy and paste). This makes it really draining when, for instance, you have to transcribe someone speculating for four pages whether Jumbo, Choshu, or Yatsu was the better amateur wrestler. But I will see this through. 

Still though, any English-language bios besides Hansen's (which I've read) go into All Japan for more than just a couple pages? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 hours ago, KinchStalker said:

I can't really call this a 'recommendation' because you'd have to have a lot of free time and be really stubborn to go through with this without reading Japanese, but it would definitely be under-the-radar so far as this board is concerned. For the past week, I've been transcribing (chapter by chapter, and then feeding that text into DeepL) a 2020 Jumbo bio written by former Gong editor Kagehiro Osano. I'm seventy pages in now (of just under 600), and I've received a lot of good info. Very tedious process, sure; the app I'm using only reads up to four characters at a time, and you have to check their accuracy yourself (and, horror of horrors, sometimes you'll still probably need to hunker down and search for a particular kanji yourself online to copy and paste). This makes it really draining when, for instance, you have to transcribe someone speculating for four pages whether Jumbo, Choshu, or Yatsu was the better amateur wrestler. But I will see this through. 

Still though, any English-language bios besides Hansen's (which I've read) go into All Japan for more than just a couple pages? 

That's quite a project!

I'd love to read your translated version once you're done if you decide to share it.

I really enjoy your added insight on some of the early Jumbo matches along with the AJPW and Japanese pro wrestling landscape of the era.

It adds so much more when rewatching those older matches to have the underlying context.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, SPS said:

That's quite a project!

I'd love to read your translated version once you're done if you decide to share it.

I really enjoy your added insight on some of the early Jumbo matches along with the AJPW and Japanese pro wrestling landscape of the era.

It adds so much more when rewatching those older matches to have the underlying context.

Thank you for the compliments.

I'm not really up to posting a full translated version - I know my way around DeepL well enough to extract information, but it's not exactly readable for pleasure. Also the book is pretty new so a full translation being out there like that feels ethically dubious. If there is interest, however, I am willing to entertain the idea of making a thread with the facts and information I find through this process. Along the way I'd probably sprinkle in other knowledge I've gathered in my research efforts towards my personal project (if you're interested in what that is I talked about it in my post in the Introduction thread, though it's developed a bit since then).
 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, KinchStalker said:

Thank you for the compliments.

I'm not really up to posting a full translated version - I know my way around DeepL well enough to extract information, but it's not exactly readable for pleasure. Also the book is pretty new so a full translation being out there like that feels ethically dubious. If there is interest, however, I am willing to entertain the idea of making a thread with the facts and information I find through this process. Along the way I'd probably sprinkle in other knowledge I've gathered in my research efforts towards my personal project (if you're interested in what that is I talked about it in my post in the Introduction thread, though it's developed a bit since then).
 

Yeah, I was going to suggest you drop some tidbits that we probably didn’t/couldn’t know. Sometimes it’s like a blind man touching an elephant for all the context we don’t have. But stick to what is doable and you’re comfortable with.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

54 minutes ago, Matt D said:

Yeah, I was going to suggest you drop some tidbits that we probably didn’t/couldn’t know. Sometimes it’s like a blind man touching an elephant for all the context we don’t have. But stick to what is doable and you’re comfortable with.

Ask and you shall receive.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Currently reading Foley's fourth, Countdown to Lockdown. The whole format of jumping back and forth in the timeline (The main narrative is the build to Foley/Sting at Lockdown, but in between it shifts into other stuff, mostly stuff about Foley's final days in the WWE) is weird, but it still works. I wouldnt say it's as good as his first two, but I do prefer it to Hardcore Diaries. On a side note, are there any other autobiographies out there from former TNA guys (or at least ones from people who worked in TNA like Foley)?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, JRH said:

Currently reading Foley's fourth, Countdown to Lockdown. The whole format of jumping back and forth in the timeline (The main narrative is the build to Foley/Sting at Lockdown, but in between it shifts into other stuff, mostly stuff about Foley's final days in the WWE) is weird, but it still works. I wouldnt say it's as good as his first two, but I do prefer it to Hardcore Diaries. On a side note, are there any other autobiographies out there from former TNA guys (or at least ones from people who worked in TNA like Foley)?

The Young Bucks' book has a good amount of discussion of the backstage scene in TNA when they worked there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...