Sunday 13 May 2012

Every Hand Revealed by Gus Hansen


Every Hand Revealed

by Gus Hand 

Quick Thoughts

Most poker books present hand histories and provide analysis of these hands to one degree or another.  This might be one or two chapters, or even most of the book.  However, Gus Hansen's Every Hand Revealed is unique in following a player all the way  through a large tournament to the final table. Gus ultimately won the 2007 Aussie millions and this book describes how he went from playing on day one to the heads up play at the final table on day five. In addition to recording the hands played there is detailed commentary and advice, which provides insight into a player that has an interesting aggressive style of play. This book is not really a beginners book, but most other players will gain something from it, or at least find it interesting.

This book is unique, and more than that is interesting and informative to read. On this basis it gets five stars out of five from me.

Typical Cost

£7 to £12, $10 to $16

Basics

A medium sized soft back book of around 370 pages. There is a quick introduction including a nice piece on crucial hands, which is interesting to periodical flick back to as you go through the later chapters. The introduction is followed by chapters covering day 1, day 2, day 3 and day 4 of the tournament. In addition to describing the play on these days each of the chapters has a useful "my advice" section from Gus.  For example chapter 1 has advice on how to approach a tournament from the beginning and chapter 3 has advice on varying playing style between short-handed and full tables.

The final table starts on day five with several chapters dedicated to it. This starts with a chapter covering the full final table of 7 players. Another chapter covers 3 handed play, followed by a chapter on heads up play for first place. Chapter 8 provides advice on various aspects of play through the tournament including limping, continuation bets and bluffing. The book finishes with a few pages providing afterthoughts.

Additional Thoughts

As noted in quick thoughts; this is not a beginners book. It does not provide commentary at a basic level, or play the role of an instructional book. Less experienced players are also likely to get into trouble trying to play an loose aggressive style of poker like Gus Hanson.  Most other players over a wide range of abilities will get something from this book, either by learning from some of the hands or from reading some of the sections that provide advice. This is also a book you may well read more than once and the individual chapters can be dipped into one at a time without having to read the whole book in one go.


If you have read this book share your thoughts with a star rating or a comment.

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