Benoit (book)

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Benoit: Wrestling with the Horror that Destroyed a Family and Crippled a Sport
Cover
AuthorsHeath McCoy
Greg Oliver
Steven Johnson
Irvin Muchnick
LanguageEnglish
SubjectProfessional wrestling, murder, suicide, concussion, steroids, death, journalism[1]
GenreBiography
Published2007
PublisherECW Press
Publication placeCanada
Media typeHardcover and paperback
Pages180[2]
ISBNLua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).

Benoit: Wrestling with the Horror that Destroyed a Family and Crippled a Sport is a 2007 non-fiction book co-written by sports journalists Heath McCoy, Greg Oliver, Steven Johnson, and Irvin Muchnick. about the Canadian professional wrestler Chris Benoit and his murder-suicide of his family. It consists of four essays, one by each author, about Benoit, his wife Nancy and their 7-year-old son Daniel, their deaths, and the aftermath of the murders. The book was released by the Canadian publisher ECW Press in October 2007.

Publication history

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The book was released in October 2007 and include an introduction which is followed by four essays that each discuss the subject from a distinct perspective.[3][4][5][6]

  • The media's coverage of the story and the role of the media in the story itself is covered first by Steven Johnson, investigative reporter.[4][6] His essay was named "Roids, Reporters, and Rasslin': Anatomy of a Feeding Frenzy".[7]
  • Heath McCoy looks over the facts of the case and examines Benoit's Alberta wrestling roots in Stampede Wrestling with the Hart family.[4][6] His essay was titled "Stampede Days: A Crippler on the Rise".[7]
  • Irvin Muchnick gives his opinion on the pop-cultural relevance and the place of this tragedy in the history of professional wrestling.[4][6] His essay was named "Day of the Dead".[7]
  • Greg Oliver discusses the Benoit story in the context of the professional wrestling industry and personal correspondence with Benoit.[4][6]

To advertise the book Oliver went on Entertainment Tonight Canada and McCoy went on Live Audio Wrestling to be interviewed.[8]

Reception

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Pre-orders of the book establish it as one of the 400 top-ranked sellers at Amazon Canada by September 26. Interest was mainly fueled by the two-part interview with co-author Greg Oliver the same week on the Canadian edition of Entertainment Tonight.[9] By May 2008 it was the number one book on Amazon.ca's wrestling category.[10]

Shaun Smith of Quill & Quire stated that Muchnick finished the book with a "gem", feeling that his segment assembled the facts but let the reader connect the dots.[11] Mike Jenkinson of SLAM! Wrestling expressed that he was leery when approaching the book, worrying that it would be a "rush job" but that it was far better than he expected it to be even with many faults.[12] Bryan Dykens of the Online World of Wrestling gave the book a score of 8/10 and expressed that the book told the story of the Benoit tragedy as straightforward as it had ever been told.[13] Patrick Hickey Jr. of Reviewfix felt that the book was a satisfying read by featuring "a near perfect blend of commentary, journalism and nostalgia" and that it is a quick read that any serious wrestling fan should take a look at.[14]

The book was nominated for Best Pro Wrestling Book at the 2008 Wrestling Observer Newsletter awards.[15][16]

References

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