The Pursuit of Poker Success<\/em> doesn\u2019t fit into any of those categories. It\u2019s not an X\u2019s and O\u2019s strategy book, nor is it a biography or history book. It\u2019s a series of interviews with a bit of all those things. And every conversation is born out of that single question: How do you define success?<\/p>\nThe Pursuit of Poker Success isn\u2019t laden with poker terminology or in-depth strategic discussion, but the nuggets of wisdom provided throughout will prove invaluable to pretty much anyone, poker player or non-poker player.<\/p>\n
In that respect, The Pursuit of Poker Success<\/em> is the rarest of rare, a poker book that will appeal to poker players, as well as people who don\u2019t know if a flush beats a straight, since some of the advice\/discussion is transferable to other walks of life.<\/p>\nA light touch from Lance Bradley<\/span><\/h2>\nBradley doesn\u2019t try to rationalize or make sense of the answers the players give. There\u2019s no recap of what he took away from each interview. Instead, he gently guides the conversation with pertinent follow-up questions, and lets the players do the talking.<\/p>\n
No player is given preferential treatment.<\/p>\n
The interviews are arranged alphabetically, and every player, from well-known players like Daniel Negreanu<\/strong> and Phil Hellmuth<\/strong>, to names that will only be known to poker enthusiasts like Niall Farrell<\/strong> and Ben Tollerene<\/strong>, has a full-page intro\/bio and four pages of text.<\/p>\nAdditionally, there\u2019s no big takeaway that ties the 50 interviews together in some overarching way. The book simply ends with the final interview with three-time WPT Champion and 2015 POY Anthony Zinno<\/strong>.<\/p>\nWhat I took away from The Pursuit of Poker Success<\/span><\/h2>\nFor anyone who\u2019s spent time in the poker world, what isn\u2019t said is even more interesting than what is said.<\/p>\n
I also found Bradley\u2019s interview subjects interesting and telling.<\/p>\n
Of the 50 people interviewed, only four are what I would call pre-poker-boom players (players who\u2019d established themselves as successful players before the poker boom):<\/p>\n
\nJennifer Harman<\/li>\n Phil Hellmuth<\/li>\n Daniel Negreanu<\/li>\n Erik Seidel<\/li>\n<\/ol>\nAs a whole, I felt the poker boom era players Bradley spoke with understood the opportunity they were presented with. Still, I was surprised at how few spoke about luck. Not luck at the tables, but the fortune of being the right type of person in the right place at the right time.<\/strong><\/p>\nBasically, falling within the 18-24 age bracket from around 2003-2006, and having a certain aptitude for poker.<\/p>\n
Couple that opportunity with Ike Haxton\u2019s<\/strong> belief that successful poker players tend to have a mix of uncommon personality traits (specifically mentioning an ability to be detached from results) and you start to see what this very diverse cast of 50 humans from all different backgrounds have in common.<\/p>\nThere are some outliers, but by and large there is a common theme that goes unsaid throughout the text: a certain self-centeredness.<\/p>\n
For the most part, all the players in The Pursuit of Poker Success<\/em> looked inward, and talked about what they had done to make it in the poker world. For the players in the book that self-centeredness manifests as a competitive drive to improve regardless of the early results.<\/p>\nIt\u2019s a mindset very few people possess, and the variance of poker makes it all the more difficult to see the end goal when you\u2019re getting your teeth kicked in.<\/p>\n
Virtually every player profiled seems to have known very early on that they had found something special in poker. As Jennifer Harman<\/strong> said, she felt at home at a poker table. I would guess all of the players feel similarly, in that they\u2019re comfortable in what is a very uncomfortable situation: at a poker table risking significant amounts of money.<\/p>\nBut that was my takeaway from the book. Yours will likely be different.<\/p>\n
Like the varied paths the interviewees took to poker success, what you get from the book may be something else entirely. That\u2019s what makes The Pursuit of Poker Success such an interesting read, and makes it deserving of a place on any poker bookshelf.<\/p>\n
Lead image taken by Antonio Abrego<\/em><\/p>\nThe post Book Review: The Pursuit Of Poker Success By Lance Bradley appeared first on .<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
How do you define success? That\u2019s the first question poker journalist Lance Bradley asked during […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"link","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","vebbtech_seo_disable_yoast":false,"vebbtech_seo_hide_author":false,"vebbtech_seo_hide_date":false,"vebbtech_seo_hide_factchecker":false,"vebbtech_seo_fact_check_enabled":false,"vebbtech_seo_post_reviewer":0,"vebbtech_seo_post_review_date":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[6,372],"tags":[],"class_list":{"0":"post-9805","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-link","6":"category-news-category","7":"category-player","8":"post_format-post-format-link"},"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
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