Hitman: My Real Life in the Cartoon World of Wrestling
Hitman: My Real Life in the Cartoon World of Wrestling book cover

Hitman: My Real Life in the Cartoon World of Wrestling

Kindle Edition

Price
$9.99
Publisher
Grand Central Publishing
Publication Date

Description

From Publishers Weekly Hart's account of his professional wrestling career is almost literally blow-by-blow, with detailed descriptions of the choreography of many of his most prominent matches in the former World Wrestling Foundation and the now-defunct World Championship Wrestling. (And, yes, he freely admits that the outcomes are determined in advance, while the wrestlers work out the actual moves for themselves.) To hear him tell it, everybody hailed him as the best damn worker in the business, a storyteller with the comparative artistry of a De Niro. But the manipulative schemes of WWF head Vince McMahon (and several of his colleagues) kept Hart from reaching his full potential as a champion until injuries sidelined him for good. The memoir goes deep into Hart's family history—his father was one of the pioneers of the Canadian pro wrestling circuit, and his brothers and brothers-in-law followed him into the business. Wrestling fans will eat up all the backstage drama, but even those who don't care for the shows should be impressed by Hart's meticulous eye for telling detail—the bittersweet story that results is simultaneously a celebration and an exposé. 32 pages of photos. (Oct. 8) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. PrefaceIt seemed like an eternity until the pastor called me to the podium. I rose slowly from my seat, away from the insulation of loved xadones–xadJulie, our four kids, my friend Marcy and Olympic wrestling champion Daniel Igali. I felt them all take a deep breath as I made my way to the xadaisle.My father’s funeral service was held on October 23, 2003, at the biggest church in Calgary, yet it overflowed with an eclectic throng of thousands who came to pay their respects to the legendary Stu Hart, xadold-xadtime pro wrestling promoter xadextraordinaire.I moved slowly, a silent prayer resounding in my head, “Please, God, help me make it through.” I am an experienced public speaker, but my confidence had been shattered by a major xadstroke.It hadn’t been that long since I’d been trapped in a wheelchair, paralyzed on the left side, unsure whether I’d ever walk again. Since then I’d been having emotional meltdowns triggered by the most unlikely things; this is common among stroke victims. I didn’t know how I was going to deliver a eulogy worthy of my father and not break down. It was also hard for me to walk tall when I felt so many eyes measuring the difference between what I was xadnow–xadmy body stiff, the chiselled edges softened–xadto what I’d been.But when I walked past the pew where my brothers and sisters xadsat–xadmy limp more noticeable than I wanted–xadI sensed, perhaps for the first time in our lives, that they were all behind me, even those with whom I’d had differences. Do it for Dad, Bret. Do it for all of us. Do us proud. There’d been twelve Hart kids, and now there were ten. Our beloved mother, Helen, had died just two years earlier. We’d all been through so much, travelled such a long, long road.This wasn’t just the end of my father’s life, this was something deeper, and I think we all felt it. So many times over so many years I truly thought this godforsaken business was dead to me, but this was the day pro wrestling died for me–xadfor good.In the front pew sat Vince McMahon, billionaire promoter of the WWE (once the WWF), who’d made a failed attempt to steal my dignity, my career and my reputation. Beside him sat Carlo DeMarco, my old friend turned loyal McMahon lieutenant. They were doing their best to look dignified, but I knew–xadand they knew I knew–xadthat McMahon’s presence at Stu Hart’s funeral was more about image than anything else. It only made me more determined to climb the steps with my head held high. You don’t matter to me any more, Vince. I survived you, and everything else too. I had thought it was wrestling’s darkest hour when I’d had my heart cut out in the middle of the ring by that son of a bitch. Then the Grim Reaper of wrestling took my youngest brother, Owen, and that was the blackest day.Keep walking, I told myself, for Davey, Pillman, Curt, Rick, Liz . . . so many of us are gone, so young, and directly on account of the wrestling life. Hell, even Hawk. People told me he had wept like a baby when he heard Stu had died of pneumonia at eightyxadthree . . . and then Hawk died that very night. One more for the list. And surely not the last.I reached into my breast pocket and took out my notes, carefully unfolding them on the slippery, polished surface of the oak podium. I surveyed the crowd, my gaze stopping at the young apprentices, Chris Benoit, Edge and Storm, who looked back at me with respectful anticipation. Next I glanced at a company of stalwart ring veterans–The Cuban, Leo, Hito, even Bad xadNews–xadall more ruminative and melancholy than I’d ever seen them. I read it in their faces, the unspoken truth that burying a man like Stu Hart was truly the end of what we had lived xadfor–xadand too many had died for.And then the sight of old Killer Kowalski, in his good suit, transported me back four decades, to before Owen was even born.I am a survivor with a story to tell. There’s never been an accurate account of the history of pro wrestling. All the public knows is what is packaged and sold to them by the industry. Since I’m no longer in the business, I’m in a decent position to tell the truth, without fear of recrimination. With this book, which is based on the audio diary I kept through all my years in wrestling, starting in my early twenties, I want to put you in my shoes so you can experience what pro wrestling was like in my era, through my eyes. It’s not my intention to take needless jabs at those who made the journey with me, but I’ll pull no punches either. Not here.Wrestling was never my dream, and all too often it was my nightmare. Yet ingrained in me from birth was the instinct to defend it like a religion. For as long as I can remember, my world has been filled with liars and bullshitters, losers and con men. But I’ve also seen the good side of pro wrestling. To me there is something beautiful about a brotherhood of big, tough men who only pretend to hurt one another for a living instead of actually doing it. I came to appreciate that there is an art to it. In contrast to my father, who loved to proudly tell people who the real tough guys, or shooters, of his generation were, I can just as proudly tell you who the great workers, or pretenders, of my generation were. Unlike so many wrestlers with their various madexadup names and adopted personae, I was authentic, born Bret Hart into a wrestling world I couldn’t escape. I can’t say life’s been easy, but I can say it’s been interesting.I’ve always thought of myself as a quiet, easygoing kind of guy, and I believe I was well respected by most of my peers. Some have labelled me as arrogant, and others say I lacked charisma. Admittedly, I wasn’t the best talker or mic man in the business, but I more than made up for it with my technical proficiency in the ring. I don’t think anyone can rightly dispute that I was a wrestler who put the art first and gave everything I had to the business–xadand to the fans.I’ve always been grateful to have been a world champion who actually did travel the world. People from all walks of life, from New York to Nuremberg, from Calgary to Kyoto, have told me that I inspired them in some way and that I represented everything that was decent about pro wrestling, the way it used to be, when there was still honour in it. It seems like all the world loves an honest battler.I worked hard to bring out the best in my opponents. I gratefully acknowledge the hundreds of wrestlers I worked with in thousands of matches over twentyxadthree years, and am proud that I never injured another wrestler to the point that he couldn’t work the next day. Regrettably, I can’t say the same about some of those who worked with me. I took it as a challenge to have a good match with anybody. I respected both the greenxadhorn jobbers, whose role it was to lose or put me over, and the old-timers, the big tough men of wrestling who allowed me the honour of standing over them with my hand raised. I refused to lose to a fellow wrestler only once in my career, and that was because he refused to do the same for me and others.The public record is filled with false impressions of me from those who think they know me. Sadly, that includes some members of my own family. My youth wasn’t as loving and sweet as the fable that’s been perpetuated in wrestling lore. I’ve been hurt and betrayed by some of my brothers and sisters, yet I don’t feel I ever let them down. Some of them sometimes behave as though they begrudge what I’ve achieved, even though I’ve paid my dues in ways they can’t even imagine. The truth is, my family knows very little about me.It wasn’t easy growing up the eighth of twelve kids, with seven brothers and four sisters. As a child I was drawn to my sweet mother and intimidated by my gruff father. Stu had a temper so fierce that some would consider his corporal punishment child abuse. Too many times I limped around bruised and battered, my eyeballs red and ruptured because of his discipline. On more than a few occasions I thought I was going to die before he was done with me. Often, as I was on the verge of blacking out from some choke hold of Stu’s, he’d huff, “You’ve breathed your last breath.”My father was two different people. At an early age I began to call one of them Stu, and I was terrified of him. Dad was the father I loved. When I was little I used to think Stu overlooked the bad behaviour of his favourite kids and ignored the goodness in the kids who didn’t matter as much to him. Looking back I can see that he was hardest on the ones he thought had the most potential. He instilled in me a tenacious drive to succeed by implanting in me his own strong fear of failure. For most of my youth, he teetered on the brink of bankruptcy while I feared becoming the first Hart kid to fail a grade in school. My empathy with his fear connected us.Like my father, I developed at least a couple of alter egos. At home I kept to myself and generally did whatever my older brothers told me to do; it was just easier that way. At my father’s wrestling shows every Friday night, I played Joe Cool, popular with the girls and on top of the world–xadall part of the show. At school I was shy, but the fights were real. All the Hart kids were bullied for wearing hand-me-downs, and I was always scrapping to defend the family honour. The wrestling fans on Friday nights had no idea that I often attended school wearing shorts in the winter because that’s all I had, or that I got my first pair of new runners when I was fourteen.Later on in life I was one guy on the road, another at home and yet another in the ring. Which on... --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. “Bret Hart is the best there is, the best there was, the best there ever will be.” —Ric Flair“Bret Hart still makes me believe that wrestling is good.” —Hulk Hogan “A legend!” —The Rock --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Though Bret Hart is now retired from wrestling, he is recognized around the world as one of the all-time greats. In 2006 he was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame. He lives in Calgary. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Written without collaborators and based on decades of tape recordings he made throughout his career,
  • Hitman
  • is Bret Hart's brutally honest, perceptive and startling account of his life in and out of the ring that proves once and for all that great things come in pink tights.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(1.4K)
★★★★
25%
(578)
★★★
15%
(347)
★★
7%
(162)
-7%
(-162)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Great stories and details, but Bret is his own biggest fan

I had Bret Hart's book on my nightstand for nearly a year, holding off on starting the book due to its length of 550 pages. Once I did finally dive into the book, I finished it in three marathon reading sessions. As a kid who grew up on 1980s WWF, I found the stories and details of specific werestlers fascinating. The reason I went with four stars instead of five stars was because, as awesome as the stories were, the continual self-congratulations do get rather overbearing at times.

Seemingly everyone mentioned in the book had their "best match ever" against Hart -- from Yokozuna to Tom McGee. Bret also points out in the book that he carried Ric Flair to great matches and repeatedly mentions that he never injured any wrestler during his career to the point that they were unable to work the following night. Hart also pointed out that when he injured his ribs during a match with Dino Bravo, horror washed over Bret when he realized that his selling was so realistic that no one would be able to tell he had been legitimately injured by a dive into the ringside railing. After a while, the self-congratulations just became too much,.

But there is no doubt the book is one of the best wrestling books out there. As expected, Shawn Michaels, Triple H and Vince McMahon all come off looking very bad in the book. Another guy who Bret crushes in the book is the Ultimate Warrior. Hart tells the story of Warrior blowing off a dying child from the Make A Wish Foundation, and says it was one of the worst things he ever saw during his wrestling career.

To me, the funniest story in the entire book was Bret talking about pranking Dick Murdoch while in Dubai. Hart noticed a pair of soiled underwear on the floor under a bench in the dressing room and switched the soiled underwear with the clean pair Murdoch had hanging on a hook. Upon seeing the dirty underwear where his once clean pair had been, an exasperated Murdoch blurted out, "All I know is there must be a **** freak running around here, because somebody **** in my underwear, and I'm dang sure it wasn't me." LOL

Hart also writes extensively about the Dynamite Kid, calling him the best wrestler he ever saw while also repeatedly stating that Tom Billington suffered from "Small Man's Syndrome". Hart openly wonders if Billington ending up in a wheelchair wasn't karma for his repeated cruelty during his career. When Bret talks about his own adultery while on the road, he seems to give himself a pass by writing that his many adulterous relationships may have saved his life because he was not into drugs and steroids nearly to the degree of his contemporaries in the sport.

The many self-congratulations aside, it is hard not to feel sad for Hart when he talks about the death of his brother and how it ripped his family to pieces over money and how culpable Vince McMahon was in the death of Owen Hart. Bret recounts conversations he had with Owen in which they agreed that the wrestling business was not worth dying over, and the vivid dreams Bret had about Owen after his brother's death.

This is one of the best wrestling autobiographies you can read, but just be aware that the book comes with lots of self-congratulations mixed in with plenty of great stories (both positive and negative) about nearly every big name wrestler of the 1980s and 1990s.
11 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great stories and details, but Bret is his own biggest fan

I had Bret Hart's book on my nightstand for nearly a year, holding off on starting the book due to its length of 550 pages. Once I did finally dive into the book, I finished it in three marathon reading sessions. As a kid who grew up on 1980s WWF, I found the stories and details of specific werestlers fascinating. The reason I went with four stars instead of five stars was because, as awesome as the stories were, the continual self-congratulations do get rather overbearing at times.

Seemingly everyone mentioned in the book had their "best match ever" against Hart -- from Yokozuna to Tom McGee. Bret also points out in the book that he carried Ric Flair to great matches and repeatedly mentions that he never injured any wrestler during his career to the point that they were unable to work the following night. Hart also pointed out that when he injured his ribs during a match with Dino Bravo, horror washed over Bret when he realized that his selling was so realistic that no one would be able to tell he had been legitimately injured by a dive into the ringside railing. After a while, the self-congratulations just became too much,.

But there is no doubt the book is one of the best wrestling books out there. As expected, Shawn Michaels, Triple H and Vince McMahon all come off looking very bad in the book. Another guy who Bret crushes in the book is the Ultimate Warrior. Hart tells the story of Warrior blowing off a dying child from the Make A Wish Foundation, and says it was one of the worst things he ever saw during his wrestling career.

To me, the funniest story in the entire book was Bret talking about pranking Dick Murdoch while in Dubai. Hart noticed a pair of soiled underwear on the floor under a bench in the dressing room and switched the soiled underwear with the clean pair Murdoch had hanging on a hook. Upon seeing the dirty underwear where his once clean pair had been, an exasperated Murdoch blurted out, "All I know is there must be a **** freak running around here, because somebody **** in my underwear, and I'm dang sure it wasn't me." LOL

Hart also writes extensively about the Dynamite Kid, calling him the best wrestler he ever saw while also repeatedly stating that Tom Billington suffered from "Small Man's Syndrome". Hart openly wonders if Billington ending up in a wheelchair wasn't karma for his repeated cruelty during his career. When Bret talks about his own adultery while on the road, he seems to give himself a pass by writing that his many adulterous relationships may have saved his life because he was not into drugs and steroids nearly to the degree of his contemporaries in the sport.

The many self-congratulations aside, it is hard not to feel sad for Hart when he talks about the death of his brother and how it ripped his family to pieces over money and how culpable Vince McMahon was in the death of Owen Hart. Bret recounts conversations he had with Owen in which they agreed that the wrestling business was not worth dying over, and the vivid dreams Bret had about Owen after his brother's death.

This is one of the best wrestling autobiographies you can read, but just be aware that the book comes with lots of self-congratulations mixed in with plenty of great stories (both positive and negative) about nearly every big name wrestler of the 1980s and 1990s.
11 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Serious autobiography by a serious wrestler - but it forever tarnishes his legacy in my eyes

I was fortunate enough to be a gullible teenager in the mid 90's, and a huge pro wrestling fan. Bret Hart was always one of my favorites, and I remember cheering him on week after week. In a land of monster heels, ridiculous side job gimmicks (pig farmers, garbage men, race car drivers) and patriotic babyfaces, the Hitman was something else entirely - a good guy who got into the ring and just got the job done with technical wrestling skills, no matter who he was matched up with. He defied the odds again and again and you couldn't help but root for the guy.

This is a highly informative look at the Hitman's entire life and career. It covers his childhood and the Hart family struggles, his breakthrough into Stampede Wrestling alongside guys like Dynamite Kid, Davey Boy Smith, Jim the Anvil and Bret's brothers. From there we move along to his experiences in Japan and Germany, before arriving in the WWF. Fourteen years later he tells the story of the Montreal Screwjob and his brief run in WCW before a concussion unfortunately ended his career.

Bret Hart certainly had his share of struggles and I have respect for how hard he worked in the face of adversity. For me the most interesting part of the book is the details of Stampede Wrestling and the lengths he and Stu Hart had to go to to keep that operation running as long as they did. If you're looking for an entertaining autobiography you'll probably be disappointed here. Bret always came across as a serious guy, not really able to make fun of himself, and it shows in his writing. Nothing wrong with that, it's just his personality, but whereas the books by Chris Jericho and Mick Foley were both hilariously entertaining and informative, this one is more of a historical account then anything else.

What makes me sad is how Bret really doesn't seem to admit to faults well. Even when he does, he subtly shifts the blame and uses the "other people were doing much worse things" defense. I don't dispute at all that a wrestling life must have been brutal with the constant travel and wearing down of the body - not something I or probably 90% of us could handle. That said, I don't think there's ever an excuse to cheat on your spouse and I was shocked with how many times Bret admits to doing just that. Seems like every chapter he finds another girl in another country - keep in mind he's married with kids here. He proclaims his guilt, but is also almost boasting about his many sexual encounters, and pretty much blaming his wife for being horrible to him. Even if that's true, it's still no excuse. For a guy who preaches integrity, he comes across as a hypocrite. I still enjoy watching WWF from the 90's, but now every time I watch one of his matches, I can't do it without thinking he's going to go cheat on his wife at the end of the night.

If you're a fan of the 80's and 90's wrestling scene, you'll enjoy this book, but be prepared to have your illusions shattered about the kind of character the Hitman has.
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A 'Hart-Felt' and Compelling Story about Life in an Insane Profession

Growing up in the 1980s, I became enthralled by pro wrestling at the very height of Hulkamania and the Rock 'N Wrestling connection. My immediate favourites were the then-Tag Team Champions, the British Bulldogs. The very first match I ever saw, they came out with bodies sculpted like real-life superheroes, marching out to 'Rule Britannia', and I was immediate hooked. So of course, I loathed their hated rivals, the Hart Foundation, and was naturally upset when the Foundation's dastardly tactics cost the Bulldogs the titles. Naively, I did not realise it was all a 'work', ie predetermined. Nor could my ten-year-old mind have comprehended that the Bulldogs and Hart Foundation were in fact the best of friends and all related to each other. Mind you, this was decades before the internet. Years later, even after accepting it was not 'real', I still appreciated the art and physicality. Two of my all-time favourite matches involved Bret "Hitman" Hart, who a few years earlier I despised, having bought into his portrayal as a "heel", or bad guy. The first involved Bret against Roddy Piper, who I'd always loved, even back when he was supposed to be a villain. The other was when Bret faced Davey Boy Smith of the British Bulldogs at Wembley Stadium, where the storyline revealed that the two were in fact real-life brothers-in-law. I quit watching wrestling a few years later, as it became too much of a sleaze-fest (which in itself doesn't bother me, it just felt out of place). I still enjoy occasionally watching old WWF matches from the 'Golden Era' (i.e. the 80s to early 90s), but even more so, I like hearing interviews from some of the more articulate and well-spoken stars of the era, telling exactly what went on 'behind the curtain'. Which led me to reading Bret Hart's autobiography.

Based on some of the reviews, I came into this expecting to find Bret a bitter old man, who viewed himself as a saint that did nothing wrong, while bad things were always someone else's fault. In the near-600 pages, it never came across to me that way. What's clear is that Bret was speaking from the heart ('Hart-felt' if you will). And let's be honest, all of us view life through out own perception and bias. While some argue that he is his own biggest fan, I think he is also his own harshest critic. He openly admits to his numerous, and often times pretty horrific, flaws. His constant womanising and cheating on his first wife was difficult to stomach, especially when trying to sympathise with him as a real person and not just the persona we saw on TV. And while he is critical of many of his former colleagues, he also goes out of his way to speak highly of those who he respected and who mentored him. His feelings towards some (i.e. Hulk Hogan) are best described as 'complicated'. But after all, what in life is ever truly cut-and-dry?

I sometimes forget just how old Bret Hart is; that his career began in Stampede Wrestling up in Canada in the 1970s. While the first few chapters cover his often harrowing childhood, having eleven siblings and being born into a wrestling family, the story really picks up after Bret graduates from high school and begins his wrestling career. It was really eye-opening to read just how poor most of the wrestlers were, especially back in the 'territory' days, when all of North America was divided up into various regions that each had their own rosters, champions, and TV affiliates. Though the outcomes of matches were pre-determined, the physicality was very real, as was the potential for injury. Payouts were very also very small, with wrestlers often doing matches while injured; otherwise they couldn't afford to pay their rent or eat. This only fed the epidemic of pain pills and other drugs to cope, which Bret goes into in detail. At one point, he rather weakly tries to defend his womanising by saying it was his vice in lieu of doing drugs. Even if true, cheating on one's spouse is still horrible. Yet despite his character flaws, one cannot help but root for 'The Hitman' as he rose up from near-poverty to becoming a global superstar. Many of the chapters took me back to my childhood, as I recalled specific matches he talks about in this story. There was one particular Saturday Night's Main Event, which I'd seen a hundred times (I'd buy blank VHS tapes with my allowance to record all my wrestling shows) that stood out in particular. I loved reading the real-life story behind what unfolded on our television screens.

This book is quite long, yet I was sad to see it end. Published in 2008, it was fascinating to view the wrestling world through the eyes of one its biggest stars. I normally don't read celebrity biographies, yet I found this an engrossing page-turner. Whether you're a fan of Bret Hart, or just fascinated by the bygone eras of the insane world that is professional wrestling, this is a must-read.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

He Leaves Out Nothing, Even When It Hurts Him

There are egomaniacs in all walks of life. There are people that are arrogant despite the fact that they're failures. There are people who are arrogant but have accomplished quite a bit. So the first thing you need to know about the book is that Bret is very, very much his own biggest fan, but considering everything he's done with his life, he's earned it.

Bret's memoirs are an impressive recollection of the events of his life, and, intentionally or not, a revelation of his priorities and his values. He absolutely will not tolerate any attempt to dispute or downplay his success as a wrestler, and relentlessly pats himself on the back for carrying lesser opponents, working a variety of styles, and impressing promoters and other wrestlers with just how damn good he is. And at the same time, he has absolutely no problem fessing up to what a crappy husband he was or any of his other faults as a human being. Bret was a wrestler first. Everything else was a low priority.

His stories are funny (a party that ended with Vince McMahon taking bumps from all of his employees just to prove that he could), wistful (he misses Owen), bitter (he resented having to job to Dino Bravo), and while the stories are definitely colored by his own first-person perspective, you never get the feeling that he's spinning anything or lying to suit his own agenda. Whatever else you might think of Bret Hart, you can't take this away from him: He might be the most relentlessly honest pro wrestler who ever lived.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Memories, love, hate, hope, forgiveness

I've read this book nonstop since I picked it up. I have always believed that crybaby image is what was promoted about Hitman, it's not Bret. The experiences and lessons recounted here are told by a man who kept his honor integrity and loyalty when everyone else had stopped. Any semblance of those qualities is perceived as ego and arrogance by those who have none. I'm so happy Bret came out on top and in one piece. Sometimes the best way to get back at those who have wronged you is to smile and keep going...to be happy; it'll get to them more than revenge and hate ever could.
The Hitman was an inspiration to me growing up and his story is even more powerful now. God bless Bret Hart always.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Insight Look into the Business

First of, I’d recommend this book to anyone who’s interested in pro wrestling or is familiar with the 80s and 90s eras. I’ve been a fan of Bret Hart’s since the age of 11. At that time he was a WWF wrestler. At that time I felt that he and the Anvil didn’t get as much recognition as they should: Hitman was cool, quick, and a pretty boy, while the Anvil was the comical powerhouse of the Hart Foundation. Reading what I read proves that my thoughts were correct. Unlike what I read from other reviews, The Hitman doesn’t hate Vince. Yes, he was bitter for a while; but he considered the positive that Vince has done. Also, he gave his first wife, Julie a lot of credit for being supportive. Yes, they were both lacking during the marriage, but overall, she came through for him during his stroke. Overall, this writing was as honest as honest can get.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Excellent book

As a huge Wrestling fan of the 80s, I love reading and following up with my favorites. Bret was my favorite. I could not out this boom down. There is a special place in hell for Vince
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

BRET tells it like he saw it/sees it

FIVE STAR autobiography! BRET tells it like he saw it/sees it. Incredibly informative. Kept my interest through all pages.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Simply the best.

I have yet to read a better chronicle of a pro wrestler's life than Bret "The Hitman" Hart's and I've read quite a few.
1 people found this helpful