Slobberknocker My life in wrestling

Jim Ross, 1952-

Book - 2017

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

796.812092/Ross
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 796.812092/Ross Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York, NY : Sports Publishing [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Jim Ross, 1952- (author)
Other Authors
Paul O'Brien, 1978- (author), Vincent F. McMahon (writer of foreword), Steve Austin, 1964- (writer of afterword), Scott E. Williams (contributor)
Physical Description
xviii, 332 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781683581130
  • Foreword
  • WrestleMania XV: 1999
  • Part 1. Before Wrestling (1952-74)
  • Chapter 1. Growing Up
  • Chapter 2. Watching Wrestling
  • Chapter 3. Going to the Matches
  • Chapter 4. Leaving Home
  • Chapter 5. College
  • Chapter 6. The Call
  • Chapter 7. The Fundraiser
  • Part 2. Mid-South (1974-85)
  • Chapter 8. Start in the Business
  • Chapter 9. Refereeing
  • Chapter 10. Still Learning
  • Chapter 11. Behind the Mic
  • Chapter 12. Not Behind the Mic
  • Chapter 13. Trying to Stay in Wrestling
  • Chapter 14. Out of the Business
  • Chapter 15. Getting Back in
  • Chapter 16. Back in Mid-South
  • Chapter 17. At the Top Table
  • Chapter 18. Changes from New York
  • Chapter 19. The Greatest
  • Chapter 20. Going National
  • Part 3. UWF (1986-87)
  • Chapter 21. The Expansion
  • Chapter 22. The Decline and Sale
  • Part 4. Crockett (1987-88)
  • Chapter 23. Crockett
  • Chapter 24. Let the Games Begin
  • Chapter 25. Returning Home
  • Chapter 26. Last Days of Crockett
  • Part 5. WCW (1988-93)
  • Chapter 27. Herd, Flair, and the Ladies in the Limo
  • Chapter 28. Booking Committee
  • Chapter 29. Rotating Announcers
  • Chapter 30. Steamboat and Flair
  • Chapter 31. Starrcade
  • Chapter 32. Some Old Faces Return
  • Chapter 33. Building Sting
  • Chapter 34. Lady on a Plane
  • Chapter 35. Heyman
  • Chapter 36. Changes, Old and New
  • Chapter 37. Japan
  • Chapter 38. Flair Leaves
  • Chapter 39. Changing of the Guard
  • Chapter 40. My Last Days in WCW
  • Part 6. WWF (1993-99)
  • Chapter 41. Vince
  • Chapter 42. WCW Radio
  • Chapter 43. WrestleMania IX
  • Chapter 44. Growing Pains
  • Chapter 45. Making Friends
  • Chapter 46. In Sickness and in Health
  • Chapter 47. In and Out
  • Chapter 48. Vince and Good OI' JR
  • Chapter 49. The New and the Old
  • Chapter 50. Market Research
  • Chapter 51. Back to Announcing
  • Chapter 52. Changing Roles
  • Chapter 53. The "JJ Role"
  • Chapter 54. Talent
  • Chapter 55. The Black Hat
  • Chapter 56. So Long, Dad
  • Chapter 57. Sitting Down with Foley
  • Chapter 58. Pillman
  • Chapter 59. Montreal
  • Chapter 60. A Little More Attitude
  • Chapter 61. Hell in a Cell
  • Chapter 62. 2nd Attack
  • Chapter 63. Coming Home
  • Afterword
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Library Journal Review

Professional wrestling announcer Ross (The Stone Cold Truth), aka JR, tells his story in this entertaining autobiography coauthored with O'Brien (Blood Red Turns Dollar Green: A Novel). Ross grew up on an Oklahoma farm with a love of wresting that eventually led him to dedicate his life to the sport. He got his start driving his boss to wrestling shows, setting up the ring, and refereeing matches. He then moved on to announcing live TV matches, which became his passion. After jobs with different wrestling organizations, Ross began working at WWE in the 1990s. Here, he talks about encounters with famous wrestlers, offers his perspective of the 1997 Montreal Screwjob and the 1998 Hell in a Cell match, and recounts his relationship with wrestler and WWE chairman and CEO Vince -McMahon (who wrote the foreword). Ross also helped promote stars such as "Stone Cold" Steve Austin (who wrote the afterword) and Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson. In sharing these stories, Ross reveals his two divorces and shortcomings as a husband and father, further touching on his bouts with Bell's palsy and the physical effects of partial facial paralysis. VERDICT A candid memoir for fans of WWE, professional wrestling, and those who root for the underdog.-Jason L. Steagall, Gateway Technical Coll. Lib., Elkhorn, WI © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The voice of the WWE chronicles his many years on the pro wrestling circuit.Ross (b. 1952) dutifully traces his humble beginnings as a smaller-than-average only child in Fort Bragg, California, born to parents who were high school sweethearts. After several relocations throughout his youth, the family settled down on an Oklahoma farm. Along with his father, the author spent time watching and becoming obsessed with wrestling, which "combined the two things I loved most in the world: sports and storytelling." That interest endured through his college years as Ross began refereeing at matches, but he frankly admits that, at the time (1975), "wrestling wasn't a steady way to make a living." Still, the author kept afloat by booking TV announcing gigs and then moved into the promotional aspect of live wrestling events. His career began to escalate as he endured his parents' divorce, and he began calling matches for World Championship Wrestling in the early 1990s. Ross capablyif a bit stifflyfills in the details of his years with WCW and then at the World Wrestling Federation, where Vince McMahon promptly booked him for WrestleMania. As Ross explains how he found his footing at the WWF, the narrative, heavy on the insider information that will delight fans, becomes a name-dropping who's who of wrestling royalty, featuring all the requisite melodrama that comes with a career at the "Holy Grail of sports entertainment." A glossy center section illustrates his story through a scrapbook of photographs following his climb to the heights of the wrestling world. He experienced plenty of career highs as well as personal setbacks, including the death of his beloved mother in 1998 and a struggle with facial-paralyzing Bell's palsy. Wrestling aficionados, in particular, will appreciate the author's candor and wit as he chronicles his ascent to the top of the professional wrestling world.An earnestly written and mostly entertaining memoir tailor-made for fans already familiar with the ringside legend. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.