Nate Fischer has been grinding out a living in New York's underground poker clubs. A decade ago, as a young painter, it seemed like the perfect way to pay the bills. Now he's hit a cold streak. His once-promising art career is in freefall. His wife's flirting with a dashing book editor. And his ex-con father's problems are becoming his own. On any given night, a bad beat could mean the collapse of his house-of-cards life.
Just as it looks like he's about to turn it all around, his buddy is shot and killed right in front of him, and the cops padlock every poker club in the city. For Nate's wife, this is the last straw. She wants him out. Forced to move into his tiny painting studio, Nate struggles to rebuild from the ashes. Ironically, it is his deadbeat dad who shows him the way and is there for Nate when he puts everything on the line and takes the biggest gamble of his life.
Nate Fischer has been grinding out a living in New York's underground poker clubs. A decade ago, as a young painter, it seemed like the perfect way to pay the bills. Now he's hit a cold streak. His once-promising art career is in freefall. His wife's flirting with a dashing book editor. And his ex-con father's problems are becoming his own. On any given night, a bad beat could mean the collapse of his house-of-cards life.
Just as it looks like he's about to turn it all around, his buddy is shot and killed right in front of him, and the cops padlock every poker club in the city. For Nate's wife, this is the last straw. She wants him out. Forced to move into his tiny painting studio, Nate struggles to rebuild from the ashes. Ironically, it is his deadbeat dad who shows him the way and is there for Nate when he puts everything on the line and takes the biggest gamble of his life.
"Here is the poker novel I've been waiting years for someone to
write. It doesn't just feel true. It is."--Brian Koppelman,
co-writer of Rounders and Billions
"What a ride! I have to confess sometimes the anxiety was so great
I had to put the book down and build up my courage before I could
pick it up again. But I was so glad I did and was bereft when the
book ended-sad to be off this roller coaster ride through the world
of live-or-die high-stakes poker and marriage."--Beverly Donofrio,
author of Riding in Cars with Boys and Astonished.
"It's like a sequel to Walker Percy's The Moviegoer-with poker as a
stand-in for movies, and the protagonist now having married and
become a father. I started reading, couldn't stop."- Tom Beller,
author of J.D. Salinger: The Escape Artist
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