Posts Tagged Ben Mezrich

September Book Readings in Boston area

art of

Mary Karr
The Art of Memoir
Brookline Booksmith
Tuesday, September 6 at 7pm

gentleman

Amor Towles
A Gentleman in Moscow
Brookline Booksmith
Wednesday, September 7 at 7pm

here i am

Jonathan Safran Foer
Here I Am
Brookline Booksmith
Thursday, September 8 at 6pm

37th parallel

Ben Mezrich
The 37th Parallel
Brookline Booksmith
Friday, September 9 at 7pm

lady copy

Amy Stewart
Lady Cop Makes Trouble
Brookline Booksmith
Saturday, September 10 at 5pm

terror years

Lawrence Wright
The Terror Years
Harvard Book Store at Brattle Theatre
Monday, September 12 at 6pm

writing without bs

Josh Bernoff
Writing Without Bullshit: Boost Your Career by Saying What You Mean
Harvard Book Store
Tuesday, September 13 at 6:30pm

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llucy pear

Ann Hood
The Book that Matters Most
Anna Solomon
Leaving Lucy Pear
Newtonville Books
Tuesday, September 13 at 7pm

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Mara Wilson
Where Am I Now?
Harvard Book Store at Brattle Theatre
Thursday, September 15 at 6pm

art of money

Bari Tessler
The Art of Money
Trident Booksellers
Tuesday, September 20 at 7pm

pefume river

Robert Olen Butler
Perfume River
Brookline Booksmith
Tuesday, September 20 at 7pm

nutshell

Ian McEwan
Nutshell
Harvard Book Store
Wednesday, September 21 at 7pm

modified

Caitlin Shetterly
Modified
Brookline Booksmith
Friday, September 23 at 7pm

the wonder

Emma Donoghue
The Wonder
Harvard Book Store at Brattle Theatre
Friday, September 23 at 6pm

alan cumming

Alan Cumming
You Gotta Get Bigger Dreams
Harvard Book Store at First Parish Church
Sunday, September 25 at 6pm

commonwealth

Ann Patchett
Commonwealth
Harvard Book Store at First Parish Church
Thursday, September 29 at 7pm

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Straight Flush: book review

straight flush

Straight Flush by Ben Mezrich. Publisher: William Morrow (2013). Nonfiction. 288 pages. ISBN: 9780062240095.

Another creative nonfiction book from Ben Mezrich [The Accidental Billionaires, Bringing Down the House] illustrating the new money, lavish lifestyle for a group of fraternity brothers from University of Montana. The guys develop the online poker site Absolute Poker while living as expats in Costa Rica. If everything these guys were doing was legal why re-locate to Costa Rica? Mezrich writes: “Costa Rica seemed the natural first choice. Paradise Poker was located there—and in addition, the country seemed to be ground zero for the online sports book business. Which meant there would be lots of experienced people who knew the tech and the industry. As with many Central and South American countries, Costa Rica could also provide cheap labor—but in Costa Rica, that labor would be well educated.”

The business remains shady throughout the book. Within years the company starts netting six figures per day. The guys travel the world, party, hook up with hot “girls” [Mezrich never describes talented, intelligent women in his books. He even writes: “there was hardly a week when there wasn’t some gorgeous thing in his bed.”], buy sports cars, motorcycles and drugs. On April 15, 2011 the US Department of Justice raids Absolute Poker along with two other major online poker sites. Congress passed new legislation designed to take these operations down. Nothing would be the same again.

“Nearly every state in the United States ran lotteries, which were clearly gambling, and nobody had a problem with that. Many states allowed horse racing, which was clearly gambling, and nobody had a problem with that. Vegas was built on casinos—hell, they’d rallied around the UIGEA, because it protected their established gambling interests and cut down their competition—and nobody had a problem with that. Poker itself was legal in most states, and nobody had a problem with that.”

This is the fifth book I’ve read—my favorite is Rigged—about a guy who made a ton of money in oil futures. What fascinates me more tends to be the idiotic spending and partying. Mezrich rarely chooses to write about do-gooders like Bill Gates— millionaires who want to eradicate polio or actually help society. Instead he thrives on the playboy stylings in his books [for this one he did travel to Antigua to interview an Absolute Poker’s founder]. He sexes the stories up as much as possible. Why do I keep reading these sexist tales of hedonism and treachery? Not sure. Mezrich can spin unequivocally entertaining based-in-reality tales and clearly has a type and a formula for his success. I occasionally want a page-turner. It’s a solid choice for summer reading.

RATING: ***/5

–review by Amy Steele

FTC Disclosure: I received this book for review from Harper Collins.

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