A Family Love Affair with Gambling

Posted under Alain Mikli by admin on Tuesday 22 April 2008 at 2:38 am

A soft-pedaling memoir by journalist Frankel fondly recalls growing up in the Bronx and Queens, N.Y., learning to play poker from her dad and uncles, which would later become her obsession. As a kid Frankel absorbed the numbers-canny ways of her relatives, who doled out gambling advice such as the reference in the title to a ship鈥檚 sinking, leaving only hats and eyeglasses floating on the surface. With the death of her beloved father, known as the Pencil because he was a CPA, Frankel鈥檚 big dreams deflated and she largely drifted through school, a first marriage and drug use, before meeting woodworker Steve. She moved to Woodstock, N.Y., and, through friends, began writing celebrity interviews for magazines like Details. An idea for writing a screenplay about a poker player brought her into close contact with her ex-con cousin Keith, who had taught her how to play. From regular Wednesday night poker games with her friend Sal鈥檚 group of hard-pickled males, where she learned how not to play like a girl, to an all-poker cruise to casinos in Atlantic City, N.J., and L.A., she gravitated to playing online, which enthralled her鈥攁nd emptied her bank account. As she explains in this frank and unaffected memoir, shame brought her back to her family and closer to her mother. (Feb.)
Copyright 漏 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review
鈥淸This] Honest, funny betting memoir rises to the top鈥 Frankel鈥檚 lively storytelling allows her to turn her own crapola into a winner.鈥
USA Today

鈥淚n five minutes you will feel not only as if you have known [Martha] all your life, but as if you still have one of her sweaters.鈥
The New York Times

鈥淚ntimate, exuberant鈥
O, The Oprah Magazine

鈥淪parse and honest writing鈥
The Associated Press

鈥淔ast-paced and amazingly funny鈥
New Orleans Times-Picayune

鈥淸A] frank and unaffected memoir鈥
Publishers Weekly

鈥淔earless鈥 powerful, even uplifting and funny.鈥
The New York Post

鈥淔un and full of life. I鈥檝e known Martha Frankel for twenty years and Hats & Eyeglasses was still surprising. A wonderful book.鈥
-Jane Smiley, author of Ten Days in the Hills and A Year at the Races

鈥淎 bluntly honest memoir of gambling addiction-harrowing, funny, and compulsively readable, straight through to the end.鈥
-John Berendt, author of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil and The City of Falling Angels

Hats & Eyeglasses is a hamische tour de force. With a warm voice and a light touch, Martha Frankel鈥檚 account of growing up with gambling pays off, big- time. My bet is on her as she both enshrines and kicks her compulsion. Entertaining and enlightening, this is a must for memoir addicts, and a fine debut for the author.鈥
-Laura Shaine Cunningham, author of Sleeping Arrangements and Beautiful Bodies


1 Comment »

  1. Comment by prescription glasses — January 11, 2010 @ 3:03 pm

    What an inspiring article you wrote! I totally like the useful eyeglasses info shared in the article.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Zinrex Premium Magazine Style Wordpress Theme