Keith's book is one of many that have come out within the past year that purports to be an accurate history of wrestling (or, at least, that of the history of WWE). And as with many of the others, it turns out to be mainly sour grapes by a writer who has a vendetta against many of the people he is writing about.
Saying that, Keith is at least a bit more upfront of his biases, stating quite clearly that the work is his perspective of wrestling in the past few years and not an indepth, balanced study. However, that is part of the problem with the book as well: the book reads as if talking with a drunk, angry - but knowledable - fan who hates watching, but is too compulsive (and likes arguing too much) to stop. Like being stuck in an elevator with a Star Trek geek who no longer likes Star Trek, only with the occasional laugh line. Keith covers a lot of material in the book, but none of it on a level that seems to say anything beyond whether he personally liked it or not.
To some, that may be the fun part about reading the book; to others, it may be like some type of Chinese water torture, especially as Keith's inability to review without sticking in personal, sometimes nearly libelous, comments gets a bit predictable early on. The best suggestion I can give for anyone curious about the book is to read several of Keith's reviews on-line. If you like his style there, then you'll probably like the book. But, beware - most of the material on-line is nearly word-for-word what you'll read in the book.
Overall, a bit bland, repetitious, and inaccurate in a few places due to the "rant" nature of the writing. It is also a bit short, with mediocre layouts and a rather weak photo section. Probably would make for a better buy used than new. Meanwhile, a more definitive book about the ups and downs of professional wrestling in the U.S. is still out of the reach of readers everywhere.