To Be the Man

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To Be the Man
AuthorRic Flair
Keith Elliot Greenberg
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreAutobiography
PublisherWWE Books
Pocket Books
Publication date
July 6, 2004
Media typeHardcover and paperback
Pages352
ISBN0-7434-5691-2
OCLC55518495
796.812/092 B 22
LC ClassGV1196.F59 A3 2004

To Be the Man is an autobiographical book written by professional wrestler Ric Flair and Keith Elliot Greenberg, and edited by Mark Madden. It was published by WWE Books and distributed by Simon & Schuster in July 2004. The book's title was taken from Flair's famous catchphrase: "To be the man, you gotta beat the man!".[1]

Content

The book discusses Flair's birth and adoption through the Tennessee Children's Home Society (whose adoption practices would later be discovered to involve child selling; the opening chapter is titled "Black Market Baby") and beginnings that lead him to stardom in promotions such as American Wrestling Association, National Wrestling Alliance, World Championship Wrestling, and World Wrestling Federation/Entertainment.[2]

Reception

Dave Meltzer of The Wrestling Observer stated that it was the best written wrestler autobiography at the time, but that he felt that Flair's comments accusing Bret Hart of using his brother Owen's death to further his own agenda deeply disturbing and out of line as well as "unnecessary and offensive".[3]

To Be the Man reached No. 5 on the hardback, non-fiction New York Times Best Seller list. It reached No. 10 for nonfiction best-sellers in Publishers Weekly. Upon its release, Flair held a successful book signing at a Borders bookstore in his hometown of Charlotte, North Carolina. Nearly 13,000 copies sold between July 4 and 11, according to Nielsen BookScan.[4]

References

  1. ^ The 10 best quotes of ‘Nature Boy’ Ric Flair’s career AJC.com (August 14, 2017). Retrieved on August 14, 2017.
  2. ^ Ric Flair: To Be the Man Amazon.com (July 6, 2004). Retrieved on December 22, 2007.
  3. ^ 2004; Wrestling Observer Newsletter - Page 47
  4. ^ Siner, Jeff Ric Flair, author CNN.com (July 21, 2004). Retrieved on December 22, 2007.