Fall Guys: The Barnums of Bounce

The Inside Story of the Wrestling Business, America's Most Profitable and Best Organized Professional Sport

Hardcover, 215 pages

Published 1937 by Reilly & Lee, Chicago.

(1 review)

Marcus Griffin’s Fall Guys (1937) was the best book available on the history of professional wrestling in America. Griffin’s book explores the business of professional wrestling rather than parroting back the story lines.

3 editions

None

I have trouble putting into words just how much I enjoyed this book. One of the few I had been looking forward to reading for years that lived up to my own hype. returnreturnWritten in 1937, 11 years before the founding of the National Wrestling Alliance, Marcus Griffin set out to inform the public about the secret goings on in the world of professional wrestling, during a time that in many parts of the U.S. wrestling was more popular than baseball, and certainly other new forms of entertainment like pro football, and ice hockey. I wasn't, however, a "Hey, look these guys are fooling you!" it was more of a sneak behind the curtain, "Hey, look how neat this is." returnreturnI find it fascinating that so many people, of which only 2% where "hip" to wrestling's pre-determined nature, attended so many matches. Most of these matches sound absolutely boring by …