Read Toller's stuff

Plusdinfo

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I am on book two of three by Toller Cranston procured via interlibrary loan, and I must strongly recommend that fans looking for more information, perspectives, and/or reading material give him a read. He fills in holes when it comes to understanding personalities and events, he entertains, and he does not hold back in the slightest.
 

aliceanne

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Toller's books are entertaining and he doesn't mince words, but by his own admission and that of others he exaggerates to tell a good story.

Another good biography of that era is the recent one about John Curry. John skated during the era of snail mail so many people who knew him kept his letters. His longtime sponsor made them available to the author. You can hear his story in his own words. Like Toller his impressions of people could be brutal. John's story is much darker than Toller's though.

Rudy Galindo's biography is pretty frank, without a lot of whining. Scott Hamilton is also surprisingly open. Most of the other skater biographies that I have read are pretty generic and sound like they were written by a PR person.
 

Foolhardy Ham Lint

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I loved Toller's books. But yeah, he's got a serious ego thing going on.
Declaring himself the skater of the century took some b****, but hey, if you've got it, you've got it.

To be fair, that was part of his charm. Cranston's paintings were beautiful, too.

On the flip side, his interactions with Rob McCall and Brian Pockar (when they were both diagnosed with HIV and dying of AIDS), made for powerful reading.
 

quartz

scratching at the light
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I loved Toller's books. But yeah, he's got a serious ego thing going on.
I love his ego. He had it, he flaunted it, he made no apologies for it.


eta....one of my favourite finds is a first edition, autographed copy of “Toller” by Elva Olganby (sp?) that I scavenged in a pile of old books at an antique shop. Ten bucks!!
 
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nylynnr

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I thoroughly enjoy Toller's books. As noted above, some of his stories are exaggerated; or, based on gossip. Once I asked him about a particularly far-fetched allegation in his first book, and he responded, "Well, I was on tour at the time, and that's what everyone on the bus was saying."
 

tony

Throwing the (rule)book at them
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I thoroughly enjoy Toller's books. As noted above, some of his stories are exaggerated; or, based on gossip. Once I asked him about a particularly far-fetched allegation in his first book, and he responded, "Well, I was on tour at the time, and that's what everyone on the bus was saying."
Yes, I figured as much after he tried to exaggerate the score he gave Torvill/Dean at World Pros just to seem extra evil ;)
 

Frau Muller

From Puerto Rico…With Love! Not LatinX!
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IIRC, it got him fired from his commentator job with the CBC (Canadian Public TV).
Because he dared to be honest. My kind of person...non fake. Society calls people like Toller “loose cannons.”
 

Erin

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CBC fired Toller in 1991. CFSA was unhappy because he was coaching Christopher Bowman and felt he had been talking down Kurt Browning while building up Bowman. Toller sued CBC and won his case in 1994

That’s interesting about the Bowman connection - I always had the impression Toller was fired because of the incident discussed in Kurt’s book, where Toller was critical of Kurt leading up to 1990 Worlds after Kurt’s bad performance at Canadians and the world “disgrace” was thrown around. Toller wasn’t coaching Bowman at that point. But I guess it didn’t happen right after that because Toller was still doing commentary by 1991 Junior Worlds, so he must have been fired much later than I had understood. Perhaps coaching Bowman was the last straw for the CFSA to push back after they were already annoyed he was too critical of Kurt.

Whatever the cause, the CFSA’s position was ridiculous. I have mixed feelings about Toller’s commentary (frequently hilarious, but also mostly useless at explaining to the audience how the sport is judged), but his job shouldn’t be to be rah rah Canada all the time. Unfortunately, I think we have seen the influence of the CFSA/Skate Canada in subsequent commentators.

As for his books, I’ll be the one to dissent on that. I tried reading Zero Tollerance and couldn’t make it past the first chapter.
 

Erin

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I don’t think there was ever animosity between Kurt and Toller. Kurt discussed the “disgrace” incident in his book and said that he and Toller talked about it shortly after. While Kurt wasn’t a fan of the word choice, they basically agreed to disagree on that point and moved on. And Toller may have taken issue with Kurt’s win at Canadians, but it was clear he still had a lot of respect for Kurt’s skating. He gave a lot of praise to Kurt’s skate at Worlds that year, even if he thought it would go behind Petrenko.
 
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jenniferlyon

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I don’t think there was ever animosity between Kurt and Toller. Kurt discussed the “disgrace” incident in his book and said that he and Toller talked about it shortly after. While Kurt wasn’t a fan of the word choice, they basically agreed to disagree on that point and moved on. And Toller may have taken issue with Kurt’s win at Canadians, it was clear he still had a lot of respect for Kurt’s skating. He gave a lot of praise to Kurt’s skate at Worlds that year, even if he thought it would go behind Petrenko.
IIRC (and I may not because this was thirty years ago), Toller also had an issue with the Motley Crue T-shirt that Kurt wore to a practice session.
 

Aerobicidal

Shut that door.
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As for his books, I’ll be the one to dissent on that. I tried reading Zero Tollerance and couldn’t make it past the first chapter.
I was afraid to say this, but I had the exact same reaction to that book.

The writing style drove me crazy, but I have a very low tollerance for certain writing and it's just a personal preference.

I'd love to read a book about Toller by someone else as I admire him and (some of) his choreography.
 

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