cornmaven's review

5.0

Konnikova takes her Psych PhD and focus on decision making to the poker table, as she learns a game that promises to help her minimize chance in life and develop better ways to make decisions in the moment.

This was fascinating endeavor, and I enjoyed both her reading and all of the ideas she presented. The world of poker of course has this mystique that proves true. It was interesting to hear of the approaches that champions who mentored her took - as varied in philosophy as they were. Her two year odyssey proved helpful to her when she experienced the part of life one cannot control: a sudden medical event/emergency.

While I could not keep the jargon straight, and followed game rules and hands with the weakest understanding, the overall effect on me was positive, and I realized I could never understand it the way she did because I had never lived it. But many of her philosophical quotes (especially Epictetus near the end) and actual professional research results on decision making and the folly of human nature were so interesting to consider and rang very true to me.

Well worth the listen/read.

I was in doubt between 4 or 5 stars. I think
the story as a whole is quite extraordinary.
A psychologist who suddenly starts to play poker fulltime, asking one of the best poker players in the world as her mentor. There were funny descriptions about the world of poker, such as the game Lodden Thinks, which was invented during a televised game. It's quite hilarious.
But most of all I liked the psychological analysis she did of the game, and the parallels she made with life. These also strongly reminded me of courses I took in university about game theory, probability theory and behavioral economics. But the poker frame is definitely more fun. She writes how poker trains you to not trap in the sunk cost fallacy and to pull yourself together after a loss. In that sense it's also a game about psychological strength.
medium-paced
slow-paced

Konnikova uses the stunning tale of going from total poker newbie to World-Series competitor in just shy of a year to explore the much deeper and existential question of what can you do to control your life in a world of uncaring statistics and random chance. Not quite a partial autobiography, not quite a self-help book, not really even a guide to being better at poker, but the underlying mantra is solid. Pay attention to things around you, learn and grow from your mistakes, never take the outcome of the whims of fate personally, and try to enjoy life for what it is.

Probability has amnesia.

Got me into dragonflies.

Really good book
adventurous funny informative inspiring medium-paced
funny informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

listened to this while driving up to boise. very enjoyable

An interesting combination of psychology and sports, where the author documents here path from being an academic to a professional poker player. I've read other books about poker before and found they often descend into lists of hands played and people met acros the table. This more cerebral approach was a more interesting way of framing a book about poker and it made it enjoyable to read about Konnikova's journey from complete novice to competing at the top end of international poker tournaments.