Jun 10th 2024 06:16pm

Sign Up / Sign In|Help

 

Review Of Andre The Giant Book

Review Of Andre The Giant Book

Posted: May 25th 2009 By: CMBurnham

The Lo-Down

Andre Roussemoff was one of the most beloved performers in the history of the wrestling business. Under the guise of Andre the Giant, he achieved international recognition, and in his prime, was legitimately an insanely popular draw. Touring the world, and becoming, at one point, supposedly the highest paid wrestler on the planet, he became one of the most recognizable faces in the industry. His match with Hulk Hogan, at WrestleMania III is one of the biggest, and most important Pro wrestling events in history, while he was a part of many memorable angles and TV segments. He also ventured into acting, most notably appearing as Fezzik, in Rob Reiner's 1987 movie, The Princess Bride.

Michael Krugman is the writer who worked alongside Lita and Eddie Guerrero, on their respective biographies.

What's in it?

Within about two minutes of holding this book in hands, I was met with colossal disappointment, and I imagine this same vibe will be felt amongst many folk who purchase this.

The legendary life of Andre is not a straightforward biography. Instead, it's a mixture of that- combined with narrative segments detailing some of his matches, and what transpired, in addition to transcriptions of promos along the way. As you could probably imagine, this combination isn't especially satisfying. It didn't work with The Rock's book, and it doesn't work here.

Throughout the main text, there's also an abundance of quotes (the best part of the entire book) from many figures who knew Andre. These include, though are not limited to, Jerry Lawler, Timmy White, Vince, Howard Finkel, Ted DiBiase, and Jack Brisco.

Legendary Life is so half-hearted; it doesn't even have a foreword! Yep, that's right; the courageous, lovable, tortured Giant, supposedly beloved by everyone and the retards in charge can't be arsed appointing someone suitable to kick the book off. Inexcusable.

Author Michael Krugman then, gives us his own intro, which is fine, but it would have been nice to have an additional piece by someone who worked with him back in the day (err, Timmy White?). This touch always helps add authenticity, and apart from anything else, is a nice fucking thing to do.

Anyways, the book kicks off with Andre's mother and father meeting, and within 7 pages, Andre's main eventing cards in Canada. What the hell?

By the second chapter, we've already arrived at the point where Vinnie Mac's dad was booking Andre, and he toured the globe, for a variety of promotions. However, the lightening fast pace does the tale a disservice, because by this point, Andre was already a massive name, and had accomplished much prior to meeting the senior McMahon. The book doesn't really convey that particularly well.

At least though, we're introduced to some of the more insightful commentators early. Tim White is almost this publication's sole saviour. His frequent comments and insights are absolutely wonderful, and entirely touching. This man loved Andre, and touring with him for years, he would have been uniquely positioned to provide the basis for a truly appropriate memoir. Maybe a series of interviews, or a fifty-fifty split between his comments and the author's. What we end up with instead is nowhere near as appealing.

What does come across well is the discussion about Arnold Skaaland, and how he came to be the Manager, and touring buddy of the Giant. He comes across as a momentous figure here.

In later chapters, the erm, insights of Hulk Hogan become more prominent. But hilariously, his views are at odds with those of Vinnie Mac. On the famous WrestleMania III epic between Hogan and Andre, Hogan states, "I told Andre I didn't want to just beat him. I wanted to give the people something they could tell their grandchildren. I wanted to body slam him."

Vince though, immediately contradicts this, with "He didn't have any ideas in that match and he wasn't supposed to. Andre told him what we were going to do. Andre called the slam." Ahh the joys of Hogan being on the outs.

Of course, the other aspect of the tale is that the book, dishonestly sticks to the claimed myth that the event drew over 93,000 fans to the Pontiac Silverdome. It drew much less. And largely, that's an issue. This is WWE fairytale land, where Vince rewrites history and then tells his fables to his children the world over. Entertaining? Sometimes -- extremely. But also to be taken with a pinch of salt.

The biggest insult is probably the ending of the book. Within about five pages, Andre makes his final WWE appearance, his final TV appearance (on WCW Clash of the Champions), does a last run in Japan, lives through his father's passing, then passes on himself. It should have been a really poignant ending, but it's brief and hurried, as if the author had suddenly had a word limit imposed on him. Most disappointing.

Add to basket?

Sigh... No. It's just not worth it. It's an unsatisfactory beast of a biography, completely inconsistent in tone. It's tricky to know where to place the blame however. Is Michael Krugman's prose not what it could be? Or is the issue more to do with the format? Was this perhaps imposed on the author?

I believe the concept is completely at fault, and it limits the biography to being an incomplete snapshot. Who the heck needs these wacky descriptions of matches, when most of us have either seen said bouts, or indeed have access to them? Hell, there's a more emotional nod to Andre in the extra features on The Princess Bride special edition!

If you want to read an affectionate and informative tribute to "The Giant", I'd advise you to save your money on this turkey, and plump for Dave Meltzer's excellent Tributes II. Then, take a peek at the excellent DVD release, The Best of Saturday Night's Main Event and you should have your fill.

 

Tags: Andre the Giant, Jerry Lawler, Ted DiBiase, Jack Brisco, WWE, WCW

Printable version Email to a friend

Supplemental Information

Latest News

1
Making History pt 1:  Riley Grinn wins the 2024 Ryder Herring Memorial Cup Tournament

Making History pt 1: Riley Grinn wins the 2024 Ryder Herring Memorial Cup Tournament

Sometimes talent surprises you in the ring. The show astonishing accomplishment at y... Read More

All News

The Scoop

The Scoop

NEWS The Rejuvstem Clinic in Mexico posted on Instagram this week that it has been treating WWE Superstars MVP, Big E, and Shotzi at their brand new clin... Read More

All Columns

1

Spotlight in History

  • 1979 Bruiser Brody def. Mark Lewin for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
  • 1985 Tim Brooks def. Scott Casey for the WCCW Television Champion
  • 2006 Dexter Hardaway became the AACW Mid-American Light Heavyweight Champion
  • 2023 MLP became the XDWF New GenX Champion

Week of Sun 06-09 to Sat: 06-15

  • 06-09 1959 The Golden Giant became the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
  • 06-09 1966 Johnny Valentine def. Fritz Von Erich for the WCCW American Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-09 1980 The Fabulous Freebirds (Terry Gordy & Buddy Roberts) def. Junkyard Dog & Buck Robley for the MSW Mid-South Tag Team Champion
  • 06-09 1989 Jeff Jarrett & Mil Mascaras def. Super Zodiac & Cactus Jack for the WCCW World Tag Team Champion
  • 06-09 2017 The Rising (Matt Durden & Riker) def. Team Dean Machine (Christopher Dean & Jerry Dean) for the BPPW Oklahoma Tag Team Champion
  • 06-09 2023 Koko became the CPW Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-09 2023 The Regime (Derek James & Logan Knight & Merc & Skylar Slice/Sgt. Slice) def. The Roll Modelz (Malik Mayfield & Olivier Vegos) for the CPW Tag Team Champions
  • 06-09 2023 Mr. Nasty def. Mascara Purpura for the CPW 918 Champion
  • 06-09 2023 Red James def. Mr. Nasty for the CPW 918 Champion
  • 06-10 1979 Bruiser Brody def. Mark Lewin for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
  • 06-10 1985 Tim Brooks def. Scott Casey for the WCCW Television Champion
  • 06-10 2006 Dexter Hardaway became the AACW Mid-American Light Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-10 2023 MLP became the XDWF New GenX Champion
  • 06-11 1984 Chris Adams became the WCCW Television Champion
  • 06-11 2009 Sage became the SWCW Art of War Champion
  • 06-11 2011 Jake O'Brien def. Robbie Awesome for the MERC Patriot Champion
  • 06-11 2011 The Ring Intruders (Jon Cross & Fuel) became the SRPW Tag Team Champions
  • 06-11 2011 Jake O'Brien became the SRPW Patriot Champion
  • 06-11 2011 Kareem Sadat def. Rick Russo for the SWCW Hardcore Champion
  • 06-11 2011 Tim Storm def. Michael Faith for the NWA-OK Oklahoma Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-11 2022 Pastor Brent & Andrew Fenix def. The Rejecs LM (Elijah Sparks & Dr. Corvus) for the WAH Tag Team Champions
  • 06-11 2022 Connor Smith def. Romeo Reese for the WAH Spotlight Champion
  • 06-11 2022 Umbra def. Koko for the WAH Living Hope Champion
  • 06-11 2022 Dan Webber def. Paul Puertorico for the WAH Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-12 1982 The Spoiler def. Frank Dusek for the WCCW Television Champion
  • 06-12 2009 El Latino became the NWA-OK Oklahoma Light Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-12 2021 Brawler Morrison def. Blade [2nd] for the UWO Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-13 1960 Tony Borne def. Bull Curry for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
  • 06-13 1969 Chuck Karbo became the TSW North American Champion
  • 06-13 1978 Karl Krupp became the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
  • 06-13 1998 The Bad Boys (Splash Jackson & Bull Schmitt) def. The Texas Outlaws (Dan Wilder & Bernard Funk) for the OPW Oklahoma Tag Team Champion
  • 06-13 2008 Brent Albright def. Slam Shady for the NWA-OK Oklahoma Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-13 2008 High Society (Al Farat & Thomas Trump) became the NWA-OK Oklahoma Tag Team Champion
  • 06-13 2008 Josh Michaels became the ACW Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-13 2009 The Canadian Red Devil became the ComPro Showtime Champion
  • 06-13 2015 Seth Angel & Adrian Dell def. Nemesis (Bobby Starr & Damien Morte) for the ComPro Tag Team Champions
  • 06-13 2015 Killista def. Paul Puertorico for the ComPro Oklahoma X Division Champion
  • 06-13 2015 Rolling Thunder def. Michael Duplanti for the NAW Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-13 2015 Paige Turner def. Erica for the IZW Queens Champion
  • 06-13 2015 Michael Wolf def. Jake O'Brien for the ComPro Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-13 2015 Jake O'Brien def. Michael Wolf for the ComPro Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-14 1970 Fritz Von Erich def. Boris Malenko for the WCCW American Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-14 1982 Fritz Von Erich def. King Kong Bundy for the WCCW American Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-14 2004 Team Shenanigans (Tyler Bateman & Kenny Campbell) def. Li'l Joe & Al Farat for the ACW Tag Team Champions
  • 06-14 2008 Kenny Campbell became the IZW Impact Division Champion
  • 06-14 2008 Nathan Sensation & Striker def. The New Age Syndicate (Shawn Sanders & Scott Sanders) for the IZW Tag Team Champions
  • 06-14 2008 Anarchy [2nd] def. The Enforcer for the SECW Tri-State Champion
  • 06-14 2008 Dane Griffin def. Mo'Body Gillespie for the 3DW Violent Division Champion
  • 06-14 2009 El Super Colibri became the TAP Adrenaline Champion
  • 06-14 2009 Reckless def. The Canadian Red Devil for the TAP Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-14 2009 Shane Morbid def. Jon Cross for the TAP Oklahoma Heritage Champion
  • 06-14 2013 Clint Cox became the BPPW Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-14 2014 The Rising (Justin Riker & Abel) def. Psycho Sawyer & Diamond for the SRPW Tag Team Champions
  • 06-14 2014 Omega X (Brett Stopp & X-Static) def. The K. C. Wolves (Graham Bell & Luke Langley) for the UWE Tag Team Champions
  • 06-15 1982 King Kong Bundy became the WCCW American Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-15 2003 Tyler Bateman def. Jef Tiger for the ACW Hardcore Champion
  • 06-15 2003 John O'Malley def. Tyler Bateman for the ACW Hardcore Champion
  • 06-15 2008 El Culo Intruso def. Dane Griffin for the 3DW Violent Division Champion
  • 06-15 2018 Sam Stackhouse def. Abyss for the BCW Buzzsaw Champion
  • 06-15 2019 Double D became the WFC Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-15 2019 Prince Mahalli def. Damon Windsor for the WCR Revolutionary Champion
06-10
  • Largus RagnaBrok Jun 10th Today!
  • Dick Dunn Jun 10th Today!
  • Magnum T. A. Jun 11th
  • Mathmagician Jun 11th
  • J. D. Richards Jun 11th
  • King Parsons Jun 11th
  • Stan Pulaski Jun 12th
  • Lady Sensacion Jun 12th
  • Zac Royal Jun 12th
  • D'Licious Jun 12th
  • Rolling Thunder Jun 12th
  • Baby Blimp Jun 12th
  • Steven Dane Jun 12th
  • Deuce Rodriguez Jun 12th
  • Neo Genesis Jun 13th
  • Geronimo Jun 13th
  • Chandler Hopkins Jun 13th
  • John Pfanz Jun 13th
  • Mikey D Jun 13th
  • Dustin Heritage Jun 13th
  • Bill Ash Jun 13th
  • Buzz Sawyer Jun 14th
  • Sean Ryan Jun 15th
  • Lilith Grimm Jun 15th
  • Trey the Bae Jun 15th
  • Jaxon Stone Jun 15th
  • Paul Linam Jun 15th
  • Brad Armstrong Jun 15th
  • Brock Landers Jun 16th
  • Jef Tiger Jun 16th
  • Ted Arcidi Jun 16th
  • Ultimate Warrior Jun 16th
  • Chuck Hinds Jun 16th
  • Shawn Matthews III Jun 16th
  • Paul Jones Jun 16th
  • Mario Galento Jun 17th
  • Ray Martinez Jun 17th
  • Rob Justice Jun 17th
  • Talos Jun 17th
  • Abe Jacobs Jun 18th
  • Johnny Angel Jun 18th
  • Andy Dalton Jun 18th
  • Bad Boy Jun 18th
  • Bruiser Brody Jun 18th
  • Cam the CODA Jun 18th
  • Sashimi Deluxe Jun 18th
  • Miguel Padilla Jun 19th
  • Top Dollar Bill Jun 19th
  • Kodi Ocean Jun 19th
  • Mike Two Jun 19th
  • Billy the Kid Jun 19th
  • Canadian Red Devil Jun 19th
  • Wahoo McDaniel Jun 19th
  • Professor Ito Jun 20th
  • Jon Cross Jun 20th
  • Koko B. Ware Jun 20th
  • David Kyzer Jun 20th
  • Jeff the Ref Jun 21st
  • Milton Winkelman Jun 21st
  • Super Star Jun 21st
  • Rick Russo Jun 21st
  • Athena Jun 23rd

More Look Back In History

Card Results

1