While on vacation last month, I read a really good book by Jonathan Grotenstein and Storms Reback called All In: The (Almost) Entirely True Story of the World Series of Poker. Now, if anyone out there is an English teacher, I'm sure this will suck as a book report, but I thought I'd do a little review.
It's a really cool history of how this tournament grew from a publicity stunt put on by Benny Binion and 8 Texas road gamblers to a multimedia spectacle with thousands of competitors playing dozens of games and has given away more money than the four major PGA tournaments combined in their history.
It interrupts the stories of the tournaments with personal vignettes, glimpses into the lives of the players. For someone who has only been following professional poker since 2003 (like nearly everyone out there), it was very interesting to read the histories of people like Doyle Brunson, Amarillo Slim, Johnny Chan, Phil Helmuth, Johnny Moss, and Jack Strauss. Some of their stories are sad. Champions who had won millions of dollars in their lifetimes but who died like they lived most days of their lives, without a penny to their names.
It also went into the story of the Binion family who owned and operated the Horseshoe Casino that hosted the event nearly its entire run. Their story is the most intriguing. Sickness, murder, family feuds, court cases, hostile takeovers. It is an exciting tale of how the business of casino ownership in Las Vegas changed from the 1950s to the present day.
If you're interested in poker, or just looking for an interesting story full of compelling characters, give it a shot.
I feel like one of those kids on Reading Rainbow.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
A-, Overall a good effort but not up to your potential ;)
I give this post an A+ for the Reading Rainbow reference.
Post a Comment