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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great book for the poker fan-atic in your life!
This is a review of _My 50 Most Memorable Hands_ by Doyle Brunson.

This book consists of a series of very short chapters (typically 2-3 pages) describing hands from all over Brunson's career, from a family game to the WSOP Main Event final table. Brunson says that the hands are not in any particular order (p. 9). Some readers will enjoy this book an immense...
Published on September 3, 2007 by bryan12603

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Nothing worth remembering here!
I bought this book hoping to learn how Doyle analyzes his hands.
Only thing I learned is he played a hand with a guy who drops dead at the table, and so on!
It is 50 very brief stories of hands he played with absolutely no insight into how
his brain works.
Forget about it!
Published 23 months ago by Happy with it!


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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great book for the poker fan-atic in your life!, September 3, 2007
By 
bryan12603 (Poughkeepsie, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: My 50 Most Memorable Hands (Perfect Paperback)
This is a review of _My 50 Most Memorable Hands_ by Doyle Brunson.

This book consists of a series of very short chapters (typically 2-3 pages) describing hands from all over Brunson's career, from a family game to the WSOP Main Event final table. Brunson says that the hands are not in any particular order (p. 9). Some readers will enjoy this book an immense amount, but others will find it completely uninteresting. Do you know who Doyle Brunson is? Have you heard of Johnny Moss, Stu Unger AND Phil Ivey? Are you amazed that anyone would re-raise pre-flop and then bet out on the flop, turn and river with 22 and a board of KK767 (hand no. 30)? Do you even understand what that last sentence meant? If you answered "Yes" to all these questions, you will probably really love this book. (If you answered "No" to any question, don't even bother finishing this review.)

I have to admit that, prior to reading this book, I had a sort of romanticized image of the life of Doyle Brunson. I guess I really bought into the persona he projects in televised games. I assumed that he was born into some Bible-belt community where gambling was frowned upon, and had to hide his new profession from his family. I imagined that he had gambled in seedy places where people did things like pull a knife on him for having a higher flush. I fantasized that he had seen people literally drop dead of exhaustion at the table during marathon multi-day gambling sessions. I even supposed (don't laugh at me here) that Brunson had seen someone shot dead right at the poker table. Yes, that was my silly, unrealistic vision of the gambling career of the man known as "Texas Dolly."

Well, guess what? That's all true, and much more equally amazing stuff. (For the particular stories I just adverted to, see hands no. 22, 24, 10 and 2.)

But true poker fans will be even more interested in the details of the hands that Brunson played. The famous hands are certainly here, including Brunson's stunning back-to-back 1976 and 1977 WSOP Main Event wins with the same hand: 10-2 (nos. 3 and 6). He also includes his second-place finish to Stu Unger in 1980, a hand he admits he misplayed (no. 17). But for me, the single most spectacular hand was the one in which Brunson had AA, the board was A4224, no flush (hence no straight flush) was possible, and he folded to a bet on the river. Did you get that? Brunson had the nut full house, aces full of fours, he folded on the river - and it was the correct laydown! (See no. 7 for this one.)

This book is not perfect, even for its target audience. Sometimes I would have liked more information about the details of each hand. How large was the pot? Who bet how much pre-flop, and on the flop, turn and river? Sometimes this information is provided, but not always. But overall this is a terrific book for any big poker fans you know.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fast Easy Read, May 5, 2007
This review is from: My 50 Most Memorable Hands (Perfect Paperback)
From the title you can tell that Doyle is going to give an acount of his most memorable hands and that is exactly what he does. He gives about a 2-3 page description of each entailing why the hand is memorable. Sometimes it is Doyle laying a bad beat on someone or someone dying at the table. I guess that would make a hand memorable for me too!

Obviously, this book is not technical. There is no hand analysis or percentages listed. Just a first hand account of some interesting poker hands from one of the legends of poker.

As always, I hang on ever word that doyle writes, and he writes precious few. The book ends abruptly after the last hand. Too bad Doyle isn't half the writer that he is a poker player, otherwise this would be an outstanding book.

All-in-all this is a very light book and an easy read. I laughed a couple of times, and gained a little more respect for the legend... About a 2 hour read.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining and easy to read, June 30, 2011
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This review is from: My 50 Most Memorable Hands (Perfect Paperback)
I have played Texas Hold'em for about 4 years, and Doyle Brunson has also been an interesting character on some poker TV shows. So when I saw this small book in which he retells his 50 most memorable hands from his long career, I had to take a look, and I was not disappointed. Each hand is introduced with a little historical context, and the sequence of poker play for that hand is very briefly retold -- each hand covers only a couple of pages in this book. The entire book can be read in about 4 hours. Doyle mentions in one place in the book that if you play poker long enough, you are bound to see just about anything, and that rings true when one sees how several of these hands played out. This includes a tension-filled situation, with lots of betting, but which then evolved into a rather comical situation when the very same card appeared twice in the flop, indicating that a duplicate card had been somehow accidentally introduced from another deck!! Doyle related how on rare occasions a player at the table actually collapsed and died, and he noted that poker players can be rather cold hearted since play resumed about 30 seconds after the ambulance had taken away the corpse! I should point out that, in addition to this small book, Doyle Brunson has also published an autobiography that is quite entertaining as well.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A fun, fast read -- read it before a night at the tables, August 4, 2009
By 
L. Aiello (West Coast, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: My 50 Most Memorable Hands (Perfect Paperback)

A well laid-out book, told as if Doyle is sitting there next to you recalling everything in person. He doesn't start out explaining everything, so when you get this be ready to know the basics of Texas Hold 'em. There are about 10 hands of the 50 that are not hold 'em hands so be aware of those.

When he talks about many of the hands, there are nicely detailed photos of the cards so that you can really get a feel of what was shown on the table as the story is being told. This is the greatest aspect of the book - being able to see the cards and take it all in. The hole cards as well as the flop, turn, and river are shown almost all the 40 or so hold em hands; there are a few times where he goes on to tell the story without the pictures of the cards. A minor inconveinence.
Doyle is a poker legend, and it's neat to hear his memories of these hands. A great book, and I know he can come up with 50 more someday!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Doyle Brunson is a universally acknowledged legend of the game, June 8, 2007
This review is from: My 50 Most Memorable Hands (Perfect Paperback)
A two-time world series champion poker player and winner of ten bracelets from the World Series of Poker (as well as the winner of a 'Legends of Poker' tournament on the World Poker Tour), Doyle Brunson is a universally acknowledged legend of the game who brings more than half a century of experience to bear in "My 50 Most Memorable Hands". Doyle began playing as a young man in Texas when poker was an illegal pastime involving dodging the cops and avoiding being robbed, all while constantly moving on the road from town to town and city to city in search of a game. In this fascinating little book Doyle offers a collection of terrific stories combined with practical advice connected to some truly remarkable poker hands he's played out against some of the finest poker players to ever play the game. Each poker hand cited begins with a biographical anecdote providing an historical context, then follows Doyle's hand along with a paragraph or two of description as to how it was played out. Very highly recommended reading and a simply superb addition to the growing library of books about poker, each of these individual hands will be read with interest border on fascination by both novice poker players and those with more seasoned experience at the game.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars He's been everywhere, May 23, 2007
By 
Mahlon Christensen (Monterey, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: My 50 Most Memorable Hands (Perfect Paperback)
In his 50+ years as a professional poker player Doyle Brunson has played the game almost everywhere you can imagine, from seedy pool halls, to home games on the "Texas circuit", to the biggest cash game in Vegas, to the final table of the WSOP. He recounts all of his adventures here with 50 colorful and interesting tales of the greatest hands he has ever played and some of the personalities he played them against. The mere fact that Brunson can even remember 50 hands out of all the millions he's played is quite an accomplishment, especially when you consider that one of the standard poker dictums is that you should try to forget the hand as soon as you've played it. There's no doubt that Doyle's phenomenal memory is one of the tools that separated him from his competition and has enabled him to stay at the top of the game for more than 30 years. Players expecting in-depth hand analysis should look elsewhere. You basically get pre-flop-flop-turn-river followed by a few anecdotal comments about the hand. I do have to say that the graphics are very high quality, among the best I've seen in a poker book. Although this book is not essential to your continuing poker education, it is a fast and very enjoyable read, one that will only increase your esteem for this living legend.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Nothing worth remembering here!, February 25, 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: My 50 Most Memorable Hands (Perfect Paperback)
I bought this book hoping to learn how Doyle analyzes his hands.
Only thing I learned is he played a hand with a guy who drops dead at the table, and so on!
It is 50 very brief stories of hands he played with absolutely no insight into how
his brain works.
Forget about it!
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0 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars This book is NOT +EV, May 26, 2009
This review is from: My 50 Most Memorable Hands (Perfect Paperback)
I can barely express how disappointed I was with this effort. Each hand description is maybe 3-4 paragraphs of setup and follow up. Little or no thought went into the description of each hand, and FOR THE $12 tag, I felt completely ripped off. Save your money, its a terrible value.
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My 50 Most Memorable Hands
My 50 Most Memorable Hands by Doyle Brunson (Perfect Paperback - May 1, 2007)
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