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enlarge | Author: Martha Frankel Publisher: Tarcher Category: Book
List Price: $23.95 Buy New: $0.95 You Save: $23.00 (96%)
New (47) Used (22) from $0.95
Avg. Customer Rating: 60 reviews Sales Rank: 293496
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 240 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.4 x 0.8
ISBN: 1585425583 Dewey Decimal Number: 363.42092 EAN: 9781585425587 ASIN: 1585425583
Publication Date: February 14, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: New, Excellent Condition, may have Remainder Mark , Immediate Shipping, Email Notification, Professional Service, MILLIONS Served, SATISFACTION GUARANTEED!
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Loved this book! August 22, 2008 I don't think I've loved a book character this much since I read "Eloise". If they made a movie of this book, Bette Midler would have to play Martha. This is a woman that anyone would fall in love with. She's open and smart and funny and warm and loving. And nutty. For a poker player (like me), reading it was wonderful (and even instructive!) and exactly described my own experience in loving the game. But it's really about Martha, and getting to know her is a fabulous treat.
A MUST HAVE !!! July 20, 2008 Once you start, you will not put it down and then find yourself recommending to everyone you know!
A cousin...for a while. July 18, 2008 I first met Martha Frankel in the summer of '66. She came along with a "cousin" who, eventually, I would marry. It was on Jones Beach (L.I.). Her cousin was beautiful, Martha was funny and brutally honest (still is) but sorely lacked beach etiquette. I forgave her. When reading Hats & Eyeglasses I revisited a place that brought back fond memories. Martha's family was my family...for a while. I know of what she writes. She remembers details and nuances with precision. She also retains that self deprecating humor (after having become quite accomplished in her life). Her gambling came naturally from her family, like another family might foster atheletes or scholars. It was not a problem until it became a problem. I highly recommend this book be read by anyone wanting a look into a highly personal account, revealed to all...with clarity, perception and, most of all, brutally honest humor.
Grimes West Palm Beach
AN AMAZING READ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! July 16, 2008 I loved this book and I really don't care about gambling or poker. This book made me sad and happy, made me laugh and cry. I read it on the beach in Miami and was so captured by the story that I got a sun burn. This book made me believe in family.
She's Got Game July 12, 2008 Stopsmiling In her memoir, the hilarious, tragic and engrossing Hats & Eyeglasses: A Family Love Affair with Gambling (a title which refers to all that's left floating on the surface after a gambler has lost it all), Frankel writes, on playing in the casinos, "I'm wearing cleavage, attitude, and what might be, anywhere but here, a bit too much perfume." Now a self-proclaimed "poker slut," she kept doing her celebrity interviews, but with a new flair. She once talked actress Jennifer Beals into coming with her to the Hollywood Park poker room and got Beals to pull up a chair behind her, tape recorder in her lap, so that Frankel could keep shoving chips and winning hands of stud while conducting the interview.
Then one day Frankel discovered you could play online, in your pajamas. She became a self-proclaimed "poker junkie." She lost $60,000. She lied to her friends and family. She writes of online poker: "It's like crack cocaine -- very fast, very mindless, and impossible to stop. The perfect game for a generation that grew up with MTV, fast computers and instant messaging." A conversation with her beloved mother, who tearfully assumed her daughter's AWOL status was her fault, finally shocked Frankel into quitting. Frankel's memoir of addiction and loss is in some ways also a love letter to her late mother. "My mother smoked like a grand old dame, making it look glamorous, and even erotic," writes Frankel. "Every memory of my mother has smoke curling up around the edges." In the end, Hats & Eyeglasses is a redemptive but cautionary tale for all would-be poker players out there: Watch out.
From The Frankel Interview by Annie Nocenti StopSmilingonline.com
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