
Curtis (Cujo) Joseph lifts the lid on troubled childhood in new autobiography
TORONTO — Hockey fans remember Curtis Joseph as an acrobatic goaltender who spent 19 successful seasons in the NHL.
But in his new autobiography “Cujo — The Untold Story Of My Life On And Off The Ice,” the man known as Cujo lifts the lid on a harsh childhood and the odds he beat making it to hockey’s highest level.
“I had a weird life,” he writes. “Two moms, three dads and I grew up in a home full of mentally ill patients run by a crazy person. The last thing anybody expected was that I would some day make a living playing hockey.”
Home was a “rehabilitation centre” north of Toronto. His mother, who adopted him as a baby, ran the place. An addict, she was unstable and left him to fend for himself.