10 Wrestling Books That Proved Seriously Controversial

6. Justin Roberts - Best Seat In The House

Mick Foley Flair Book
Amazon/Meyer & Meyer Sport

The most recent entry on this list, Justin Roberts' autobiography provides a perspective on the trials and tribulations of serving as a ring announcer in WWE.

One of the best-written books to feature on this list, Roberts chronicles that toxic backstage culture during his time in the company, and the way that he was treated by his employers and some of his coworkers.

Despite not being the biggest star in his own right, Roberts' book holds its own alongside the wrestlers' accounts of their storied careers by being much franker and matter-of-fact about events that took place, without needing to seem like he is trying to stay on good terms with anyone.

Roberts also details his relationship with the late Connor Michalek, a young WWE fan suffering from terminal cancer. Roberts explains his belief that WWE used their philanthropy towards Michalek primarily as a method of getting positive PR, and accused the company of cutting his close relationship with the deceased child out of their revised version of events.

Contributor
Contributor

Adrian Bishop hasn't written a bio just yet, but if they had... it would appear here.