The Stone Cold Truth (WWE)
The Stone Cold Truth (WWE) book cover

The Stone Cold Truth (WWE)

Mass Market Paperback – October 1, 2004

Price
$28.89
Publisher
World Wrestling Entertainment
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0743482677
Dimensions
4.19 x 0.9 x 6.75 inches
Weight
7.1 ounces

Description

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 March 29, 2003 --Saturday Night,Pre- WrestleMania XIX When I'm sitting there backstage and I'm getting ready to go through that curtain, I'm just waiting for that glass to break and when it hits, when that crowd explodes, I might as well be a junkie and I'm hooked on a drug. -- Stone Cold Steve Austin Damn, I think I'm dying, dying for sure. I'm getting off the elevator on the twenty-seventh floor of the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Seattle, the night before WrestleMania XIX, and my heart's beating so hard it feels like it's going to crack a rib jumping out of my chest.I'm saying to myself, I'm thirty-eight years old and I'm fixing to freaking die, right here, right now. I'm having a damned heart attack! And I'm wondering how the hell it could have happened.I'm Stone Cold Steve Austin -- the toughest SOB in World Wrestling Entertainment, better known as WWE. This is Saturday night and tomorrow is WrestleMania XIX, the biggest Pay-Per-View event of the year. I'm in one of the biggest matches of my career, wrestling The Rock in my first real match after being out of the business for over eight months. I've been working out twice a day at the gym and doing nothing but focusing on this match. Mentally, I'm ready, despite all the challenges I've been through in the last couple of years -- injuries, surgery and rehab, divorces and -- most unexpected of all, maybe -- my leaving WWE. Physically, I look like somebody who deserves the name Stone Cold. But truthfully, I'm a walking disaster area. My back, neck and knees are a mess. I've got two fused discs in my back and others just barely holding together.But tomorrow is WrestleMania, and I need to perform the best I can and put on a hell of a match. Hell, it could very well be the last one of my career. I want to go out in a blaze of glory, like anybody would.Standing here on the twenty-seventh floor of the Grand Hyatt, my heart pounding against my ribs like a gorilla trying to bust its way out of a cage...that wasn't in the plans at all.I had woken up that morning feeling all right. But the more I thought about it, the problem went back before that morning...The day before, which was Friday, I had bought a couple of those high-energy drinks from the gym. I was in the habit of drinking from three to five of those things a day, plus anywhere from one to two pots of coffee, while I was off and working out. Those drinks are loaded with Ephedra and that Ma Huang crap and lots of caffeine. I should have known with all the warnings about ephedra, but it never bothered me until now. Famous last words.I worked out at the gym on Friday and went back to the hotel. I was a little emotional, because I figured this was the last match of my career, so I didn't sleep so well. When I woke up, it was one of those mornings where you need a crane to pull yourself out of bed, so I opened up one of those energy drinks and drank that thing down. This was before I had coffee, breakfast, whatever. Then I ordered some room service and drank the other energy drink. And then breakfast came, my normal breakfast, egg white omelet and a large pot of coffee. I drank the whole pot. Then I called Kevin Nash and went to see him before going to the gym and had a couple more cups of coffee with him. When we went to the gym, I noticed that over the last couple of days the reflexes in my leg were really jumpy. I have what is called a sustained clonuses reflex in both legs, which is an involuntary shaking of nerves, knees, whatever. I was nervous about this whole weekend, this probably being my last match. I was nervous about hurting my neck or back, plus there was all that crap I was putting in my body, and I had been doing this stuff for months on end. Looking back, I think I was wearing myself down. I went to the gym, but I didn't really work out. I didn't feel like doing a whole lot, so I had kind of a BS workout, a light back workout. I did the recumbent bicycle for my knees, just peddling on it, not really trying to raise my cardio or anything. Kevin had come over after he finished his cardio exercises and we were sitting together talking. I said to him, "Look," pointing down to my foot. My foot was resting on the bike pedal, and the reflexes were just firing like crazy in my foot and leg. I said, "Look at that crap."He looked at my foot as it jumped uncontrollably on the bike pedal, and said, "Jesus Christ."It was just a lot more jumpy than usual. You could see the muscles twitching away like they had a mind of their own. When we got through with cardio exercises, we just shot the breeze for a while. Then we crossed the street over to the Grand Hyatt, where we were all staying. There were a lot of fans out there and we signed autographs for a while, and everything was fine. I felt like my normal self. This was about three in the afternoon. After that, I went through the lobby, got in an elevator and rode it up to my floor. As soon as I got out of that damn elevator, that's when everything started happening. My heartbeat might be doing 160 or 180 beats per minute. It just feels like my heart's going to jump out of my chest. I've been fatigued in matches before, totally out of gas and winded, but this is scaring the hell out of me. I'm sure I'm having a heart attack. I start walking to my room, but my feet are going crazy and my legs are shaking uncontrollably every time I lift my weight off them. I finally get to my room, which is right by the elevator, and get the door open.I say, "Okay, you're having an anxiety attack or something," so I take a couple of deep breaths to settle myself down. Maybe it'll pass, I think. But it doesn't pass. It's still as bad as before. Hold it together, I tell myself. Getting over to the phone, I call the front desk to see if they have a doctor. I say, "I need someone up here. I need help."They put me on hold, probably transferring me to someone else. The hell with that. I hang up on them and call back down and say, "I got an emergency. This is Steve Austin and there's something wrong with me. I need some help. I think I'm having a heart attack."That's when they call Bob Clarke of the WWE Talent Relations Department in the WWE greenroom. In the meantime, Liz DiFabio, one of the WWE executives, just happens to be walking down the hall. I have my door wide open, waiting for some help, so I see her and yell, "Liz! I need help!"I guess I'm as white as a sheet and I've got some weird kind of look on my face because I'm freaking out. My legs are shaking and I can't make them stop. Liz rushes in to help and then Bob Clarke and Chris Brannan, the WWE Raw trainer, come into the room. Then Dr. Robert Quarrells, the WWE team doctor, comes in. This is all in a matter of a few minutes, I guess. I don't really know. They call the paramedics, but in the meantime they're all trying to settle me down. Dr. Quarrells has got my heartbeat down to 124. Then the EMTs get there and they take my blood pressure. It's 198 or 188 over 105, or something crazy like that. It's normally about 135 over 80.That "bad feeling" I got when I stepped out of the elevator feels like it's going to come back at any moment. I just want to keep walking around the room, walking around the room. They all want me to sit down, but I don't want to. I really feel like this is my day to die. It's that kind of feeling.The EMTs hook a bunch of medical stuff up to me. Then they want to get me to a hospital. Easier said than done.There are so many fans downstairs, it's a madhouse. We do our best to be inconspicuous, so none of them will know what's going on. A group of us just walk out of the hotel in a pack, with me in the middle. But a bunch of fans see me being taken to a waiting ambulance. There's a funny moment when I look in their eyes and they look in mine, and it's crazy because no one knows what's going on.Not even me. We go down to the parking garage, where hotel security has put up a barricade so the fans can't see me being loaded up in the ambulance. I get inside and sit down. But as soon as they close the door, I lie down and they pull the blankets all the way up so no one can look into the ambulance and see who I am.Finally, we arrive at the hospital, and they keep the blankets pulled all the way up over me so no one can see who they're carting into the place. I'm thinking, Jesus, Stone Cold against The Rock at WrestleMania in Seattle. That's tomorrow, for crying out loud. But I don't think I'm going to be wrestling The Rock at WrestleMania. Right now, I'm a helluva lot more concerned about just stayin' alive.I curse myself for my bad habits of drinking all those high-energy drinks and so much coffee every day. I rarely drank any water. I was just such a big bundle of nerves, with my health and everything else on my mind going into this match, plus my not wanting to stink the joint out. And now it's all just caught up to me -- BANG! They take me into the hospital and hook me up to a machine that monitors my heart rate and my blood pressure. They also get an IV going and start giving me some fluids. They end up putting five bags of fluid in me, I'm so dehydrated. An average person might get two bags, but I get five. So here I am, lying in the hospital in Seattle with tubes and wires hooked up to me, the night before I'm supposed to face The Rock at WrestleMania XIX. It doesn't even seem real. It's like a dream -- a bad one. J.R. (Jim Ross) and Vince McMahon arrive while I'm still in the emergency room. After it seems like I'm okay, they leave, thinking I'm coming back to the hotel that night. Then the doctors decide they want to keep me overnight for evaluation. So J.R. and Chris Brannan come back to the hospital. When J.R. gets there, he asks me what I ate today, which was practically nothing. He sends Bob Clarke back to the hotel to get me some good food from hotel room service. When he gets to the hospital with the food, I eat pretty good. That's a good sign. After I finish eating, we talk for a while. Then everybody eventually goes back to the hotel. I just hang around the room, check out what's on TV and listen to some CDs. The nurse says she's going to give me some sleep medication. Of course, I'm still wound up and wide awake. I've been drinking those energy drinks for eight months, and I had two that day plus all the coffee, so I'm still pretty charged up. I lie in bed for a while just thinking, not falling asleep. It's only now that I start to think I can still work my match with The Rock the next day. I know there are going to be a lot of damn people there, and I've been away from the company for a long time, and there's been a lot of anticipation -- on the fans' part as well as my own. After everything that I've done with this company, and everything this company has done for me, I want to do business with The Rock. I want to do it right. The Rock is going to beat me, and I want him to do it right in the middle of the ring. He's done a lot of stuff for me in my career, and vice-versa, so that has to happen. I wouldn't have it any other way.I lie there in my hospital bed for quite a while, thinking about my life, my career...where it began, where it had taken me, my family, my daughters, my future. And what would happen tomorrow.Finally, somewhere around three or four in the morning, I calm down enough to fall asleep. Jim "J.R." Ross: I had just walked into the greenroom to see how things were going for our staff and talent on what, to that point, had been a pretty uneventful Saturday afternoon. The greenroom is the command center for our staff and talent for WrestleMania. It's kind of like going to the only coffee shop in a small town. At some point during the day, everyone drops by the greenroom to see what's going on and to use it as a point of departure for the appearances the talent make at 'Mania. Shane McMahon informed me that Steve had just been taken to the hospital. Steve had gone through hell the previous eight months or so. Some of it he had brought on himself, and some he had little or no control over. Stone Cold deserved a break and something kept telling me that this story was going to have a positive ending. When we walked into the emergency room, Steve was hooked up to a slew of monitors that were supposed to keep an eye on his heart rate and blood pressure. I could tell he was glad to see us because he tried to crack a few jokes. But the Texas Rattlesnake was scared, and he had every right to be. Eventually Steve's vital signs started to improve, but the doctors wanted him to stay overnight so they could continue to evaluate his heart function. I suggested to Bob Clarke, who along with trainer Chris Brannan did a helluva job that day and night on Steve, that on the company's behalf, they hop back in the van and go to our hotel and get Steve some food. Steve's appetite returned, to say the least. He ordered two steak dinners and two grilled chicken breast dinners, so I felt confident, as I left his hospital room well after midnight, that Stone Cold would be able to lace his boots up -- perhaps for the last time -- in just a few hours at Safeco Field in Seattle. Stone Cold had a close call, but he was going to survive, just as he has done his entire life. And what a life it has been.... Copyright � 2003 by World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc.

Features & Highlights

  • He's wrestled under many names but to the fans he is and will always be
  • Stone Cold Steve Austin™.
  • His quick wit and colorful use of language combined with his everyman character captured the hearts of fans worldwide and rewrote the dynamics of professional wrestling forever.
  • Steve's
  • ability inside the ring and his quick-witted responses lead to his becoming one of the most popular WWE© Superstars of all times. With the creation of the
  • Stone Cold™
  • character,
  • Steve's
  • popularity expanded exponentially. It seemed nothing could stop the
  • Texas Rattlesnake™
  • , except himself.
  • The Stone Cold Truth
  • is an unvarnished take on his life, and you know it's the truth " 'cause
  • Stone Cold
  • says so!™"

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(334)
★★★★
25%
(139)
★★★
15%
(84)
★★
7%
(39)
-7%
(-39)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Engaging, honest, heartfelt

Steve Austin found a niche as a wrestler: and became perhaps THE most famous wrestler of all time, a true star in the best sense of the word. The elite scoff at this pastime, forgetting what it is: purely fun entertainment. No wrestler made it more so than Austin, and he created an astoundingly large fan base, and his way in the ring and with words turned him into a mega-star - a household word.

As this book amply illustrates, Austin has that vital Common Man appeal: he tells it like it is, and makes no attempt to whitewash anything about himself or who he is. It's really refreshing to read an autobio that doesn't get precious or too self-regarding; his style is economical, and absolutely straightforward. Austin never gets mushy or falsely sentimental, even as he plainly states his love for his family and daughters.

In addition, this is a real He-Guy, who owns up to his shortcomings and transgressions without ever becoming showily defensive. It's hey, this is what I've done, for better or for worst. Austin has the art of being heartfelt without ever being smug or facetious.

You do learn, too, that all that, proverbially, glitters is not gold. Austin makes it clear that wrestling comes with its drawbacks - mainly that the physical exertion and hard-hitting contact left his body a wreck.

Austin tells his story engagingly. It's always fascinating to learn how someone at the top of their field reached from the point of decision to the point of result, and it appears that Austin's rise is based on the classic factors: drive, passion for what he loves, perseverance, and just plain hard work.

He admits to being reserved and and not very open, which is understandable. That instinct, to keep a part of himself, FOR himself and not for the world to see, is part of the overall reality and image. A man's man, and his own man.

This is the guy you want to sit down and have a beer with, and that is the essence of this book's appeal. Austin embodies the classic American blue collar guy.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

My Stone Cold Truth.

The book was absolutely amazing. Although some of the stories jumped around a little bit, it was still interesting to read about the man behind Stone Cold Steve Austin. From his humble beginnings, to how he got his gimmick, and lastly to how his career finally ended at Wrestlemania. A fantastic read that is quick and captures your attention from the start to the finish. Highly recommended!

- Griffin
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Stone cold is god

Learning about one of the greatest wrestlers of all time was very fun.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

AN ENTERTAINING LOOK AT A WRESTLING LEGEND

Okay first off this is not my usual reading fare (the giant cartoon skull at the beginning and end of each chapter should have clued me in) I'm not a Wrestling fan, I only knew who Stone Cold Steve Austin was because he was everywhere in the late 90's and I have two younger brothers. In going over this book for my review I realized it was going to be very hard not to rip it to pieces what with all the skulls and awesome little quotes like this one: "DTA, you stupid piece of trash. Don't ever trust anybody. You ain't gonna be my partner...never! `Cause you are a longhair freak, and you suck!
-Austin to Mankind, after giving him the `stone cold stunner' -which I now know how to do should I ever feel the need.

Why did I read this you ask? Well you see I was trapped at a secluded fishing cabin for a week without power, in the rain and I ran out of stuff to read. This just happened to be lying around (I guess its good fishing material?) Anyways due to the short chapters, cold weather, absence of television and abundance of pictures involved here, before I knew it I was done. I'm going to try to review this impartially, from the point of a 12 year old boy and wrestling fan. Which is I'm sure who it was aimed at, not a forty year old romance reader. -Oh in case you were wondering the fishing was great.

We begin with Stone Cold preparing for his final fight in WrestleMania against The Rock (yum!) Steve's having a bit of an episode from the amount of energy drinks and coffee he's been ingesting and may just be having a heart attack. (FYI Chapter one is 8 pages long and contains 2 skulls, 3 almost full page photographs and a POV from his mentor Jim Ross) Then for Chapter two (which is 4 pages long) we go way back to the beginning, briefly following Austin's childhood, growing up in Texas. He talks about his family, his brothers and love of sports, football and tennis in particular. Repeating often how important it is to respect and listen to your parents and stay in school. About 30 pages in Steve drops out of college and goes to Wrestling school and the rest as they say is history.

Well sort of. We also get tidbits from his early career when he was on the road and didn't have any money, surviving on potatoes. Theres lots of stories about promoters and other wrestlers he met along the way into the WWF. He talks a bit about drugs and friends lost, feuds in the business and what really went down. We meet his first wife, second wife and third. We learn the story behind the "What?" gimmick, "Hell yeah", the middle finger salute and why its more fun to be heel then a baby face (even though you'll sell less merchandise) He also discusses his numerous injuries and what he would change about the wrestling business of today, taking it back to its glory days.

In the end I think one of my biggest problems with this book was that it was just assumed that you knew all the background behind any of the stories he was telling, so he only ever told half the story. As a wrestling fan I'm sure the half you get is awesome but as someone reading it just for the biography aspect it was a little confusing. Can anyone tell me what he was on probation for? I also never felt like I got to know the real Steve Austin as there wasn't any insight given into his personal life. As I said theres a ton of freaking photos, like every page, as well as wrestling quotes, letters and documents all interspersed with commentary from his mother, father and good friend Jim "J.R" Ross. oh and all the cool skulls.

And that's the bottom line cause Stone Cold said so. Cheers
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Reads like a child's book

I'm a big fan of Austin, but this book is really lame. He literally talks about the 3 biggest Wrestlemania's of his career in about 4 pages. It's like 'yeah, Stone Cold got huge', and that's it. No insight from him on how it felt to be the most popular athelete alive for a time.

He also repeats himself over and over about his love for his children, parents, how he only has a handful of friends, blah blah blah.

Very uninteresting read.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Not Mick Foley, But Not The Rock Either

This book is at it's best when Steve is being himself instead of the Stone Cold character. Unlike The Rock's book, this one is a bit more honest and not in character every moment. Still not written with as much honesty as Mick Foley's bios (Have A Nice Day & Foley Is Good and coming soon Hardcore Diaries). JR (Jim Ross) helps out mostly at the end of chapters and his insight is very helpful. Without JR this book would be a 2 or 3 stars. Not too much is said that isn't common knowledge, so I recommend this book for the more die-hard Stone Cold fans. This won't appeal to mainstream non-wrestling fans the way Mick Foley's books did.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great Buy, Great Story

It may have arrived a day late, but it still arrived in excellent condition. The book itself is a decent size; the image makes it seem tiny.

Stone Cold opens with a hell of an admission regarding his health only 1 day before a WrestleMania match against the Rock. Great hook for an autobiography.

Solid buy from the seller and for the story for classic Attitude Era/wrestling fans.
✓ Verified Purchase

Five Stars

Great video
✓ Verified Purchase

Its stone cold

Ive read three wrestling books so far bret harts, ric flairs to be the man and this one. What i liked reading about in these books is road storys and all the crazy crap that on the road. Bret hart did a great job in his, the stone cold book have very little road stories. If you watched his whole career on tv, or through dvds you will not learn any new information in this book, he just talks about how he got into wrestling and his best and worst moments. If your a stone cold fan i would recommend this book, if not I would read something else.
✓ Verified Purchase

Stone Cold Truth

My son has been reading this book for his college reading course. Although his teacher is not a wrestling fan, my son found the book to be filled with interesting information about Steve Austin's upbringing and family values that were enlightening. The book shows that Steve Austin is more than his persona that he projected during his wrestling career.

The book is recommended for any fan of WWE wrestling and is an interesting read.

Ira J. Bromley