This is a fascinating autobiography, it weaves Tony's early life and becoming interested in skateboarding, with a history of skate boarding the the US, and manages to weave the two things together without being contrived. He talks about how he was a horrible child, but really smart. That he would act out in class to get his own way, and after being moved up a year, immediately moving down again after a teacher launches papers at a classmate's head.
He talks about how he was a very skinny child who had to find other ways to skate vert, that later became adopted by the community, he talks about how his dad created a competition league that his dad ran for years, until he couldn't due to his health and the league folded.
He talks about becoming a professional skater at a young age, and making serious money and how skating all but died out, and that he would get stiffed on payments for demos from skate shops, before having a resurgence, and his company Birdhouse went from losing money to making money.
And how he finally quit competition, and how the non skating world doesn't get the skating world, regardless of how mainstream it now is.
I knew of Tony Hawk before reading this autobiography, through the Tony Hawk games and having known a little of skate boarding, I just didn't know how many competitions that he had won, or how old he was when he turned professional.
Overall this is a great biography about a man who seems really humble and patient, but very determined, and its also an incredible history of skating, well worth a read.