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4+ Works 244 Members 11 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Forrest Griffin was born July 1, 1979 in Columbus, Ohio. He relocated to Athens, Georgia and received a degree in Political Science at the University of Georgia. Forrest worked in local law enforcement and on his days off he trained to be a mixed martial artist at the HardCore Gym where he show more developed his trademark "Sprawl and Brawl" style of fighting. A combination of martial arts fused with a bare knuckle barroom technique. Outside of the octagon, Griffin is an ardent supporter of the USO and the Wounded Warrior Project. Griffin's first book Got Fight?: The 50 Zen Principles of Hand-to-Face Combat (William Morrow, June 2009), was released to good reviews. His second book is Be Ready When the Sh*t Goes Down: A Survival Guide to the Apocalypse (William Morrow, August 2010). (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Photo by Lance Cpl. Damien Gutierrez, cropped by uploader (marines.mil)

Works by Forrest Griffin

Associated Works

UFC 62: Liddell vs. Sobral (2006) — Self — 3 copies
UFC 66: Liddell vs. Ortiz (2006) — Self — 3 copies
UFC 59: Reality Check (2006) — Self — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1979-07-01
Gender
male
Education
University of Georgia
Occupations
police officer
martial artist
Organizations
Ultimate Fighting Championship
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

11 reviews
If you enjoyed [b:Real Men Don't Apologize|835103|Real Men Don't Apologize|Jim Belushi|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1178766290s/835103.jpg|820717], you'll love this one. Forget the King's English, these guys pull out all the stops for a slangy, dirty look inside Griffin's life and fight philosophy. In the second half, he does present some moves and techniques, a humorous 101 to MMA style fighting, but that isn't why you should get this book. If you are looking for deep and profound show more thoughts, again, don't bother. (I don't think jocks have profound thoughts.)

What you will get is a lot of stupidity, a lot of juvenile machismo, a self-deprecating/self-loathing sense of humour, totally non-PC sexism, a ton of bullsh*t advice, and tantalizing glimpses of a man who "ain't right".

If you are a women who isn't bothered by sexist language and knows a little bit about MMA, I definitely recommend this book to you--his antics will put you in hysterics every other page. For the guys, I suggest you take Griffin's advice and grow a pair before you undertake his book--whoever said "don't insult your reader" clearly wasn't talking to this guy.

This book isn't for everyone. Griffin is a fighter and this book is about fighting. Pain and violence are what he does for a living. If you find mild psychosis and general bloodiness disturbing or triggering, this isn't the book you want.

I give it five stars because this was the most enjoyable, engaging book I have read in a while.
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I'm surprised how much I enjoyed reading this: 200 pages of fart jokes, posing as a (satirical) "prepper" survival manual. However there were enough LOLs per chapter to keep me going, and the book is peppered with genuinely good bits of life advice, philosophical musings and personal anecdotes. The book pokes fun of everyone equally - bro's, feminists, the religious, preppers, and the authors most of all.

For a redneck that grew up to be a professional MMA face-puncher, Forrest Griffin can show more sure write a good line or two. Best read while on the can, a few pages at the time (that setting also most closely matches the content matter). show less
Don't read this unless you have a sense of humor. It was hysterical in a dark sort of way... I loved it! The pictures alone make it worth it. When the world as we know it comes to a screeching halt, I want to find Forest's "Safe Zone", if nothing else I will die laughing.
I've recently gotten into MMA, via obnoxious boyfriend, and was forced to read Got Fight? by Forrest Griffin. I was more than pleasantly surprised to find that Griffin was not only hilarious (one of the funniest books I've ever read) but was also very informative when it came to all things fighting. The tips at the end of the book have helped me understand what I'm seeing, what kind of submissions are being used, when watching the fights. And I can now perform a perfect Asian Dart! I highly show more recommend this book for anyone getting into MMA, be it guy or unfortunate girlfriend. show less

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Statistics

Works
4
Also by
3
Members
244
Popularity
#93,238
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
11
ISBNs
8
Languages
1
Favorited
1

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