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Victoria Coren Mitchell

Autor de For Richer, For Poorer: A Love Affair with Poker

5+ Obras 280 Miembros 7 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Obras de Victoria Coren Mitchell

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Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Coren Mitchell, Victoria
Nombre legal
Coren Mitchell, Victoria Elizabeth
Fecha de nacimiento
1972-08-18
Género
female
Nacionalidad
UK
Lugar de nacimiento
Hammersmith, London, England, UK
Lugares de residencia
London, England, UK
Cricklewood, London, England, UK
Educación
University of Oxford (St John's College)
Ocupaciones
journalist
writer
poker player
television presenter
Relaciones
Coren, Alan (father)
Coren, Giles (brother)
Mitchell, David (17) (husband)
Biografía breve
Victoria Coren Mitchell writes a weekly column for The Observer, a monthly column for Elle and is the resident agony aunt for GQ. She presents the BBC Four (now BBC Two) quiz show Only Connect, presents and produces the Radio 4 comedy series Heresy, and is a competitive international poker player, to date the only person to have won two titles on the European Poker Tour.

Aged 14, inspired by lonely Jo March from Little Women, Victoria submitted a short story to Just Seventeen magazine under an assumed name. The story was accepted and published, earning her the princely sum of £90. Hooked on trade immediately, Victoria answered a nationwide appeal from the Daily Telegraph for a teenage columnist (her ‘audition column’ was about the terrors of the countryside for an urban child), got the job and wrote for them weekly for four years.

A collection of Victoria’s teenage newspaper articles was published in 1990. After university, she became a freelance journalist and broadcaster. In 1999, Victoria adapted the newspaper columns of John Diamond into a play A Lump In My Throat, which was performed at The Grace Theatre and The New End Theatre in London and The Assembly Rooms in Edinburgh, before Victoria re-adapted it into a TV play for BBC2 starring Neil Pearson.

Victoria is also a professional poker player, 2006 winner of the London EPT and 2014 winner of the San Remo EPT. More details and tournament results on the ‘poker’ page.

As a broadcaster, she has presented Fourth Column and Off The Page for Radio 4 and two series of Balderdash And Piffle (about the Oxford dictionary and the history of words) for BBC2, as well as other BBC documentaries on language, surrealist art and Mary Poppins. As a poker and gambling specialist, she has presented Late Night Poker and The Poker Nations Cup for Channel 4, a series of World Poker Tour for ITV2 and the chat show Bar Beat for the Poker Channel, as well as providing commentary for The European Poker Tour and The Grosvenor UK Poker Tour (Channel 4), Ultimate Poker Challenge (Channel 5), Celebrity Poker Challenge (ITV1), The William Hill Grand Prix (Sky Sports), Celebrity Poker Club and Casino Casino (Challenge TV).

She has also appeared as a guest on Question Time, Have I Got News For You, QI, Eight Out Of Ten Cats, Opinionated, You Have Been Watching, Loose Ends, Midweek, Woman’s Hour and various other short-term experiments; that kind of thing comes up on the ‘news’ page of this site unless there is a good reason to hide it.

In 2002, Victoria disappeared into the X-rated film industry with her best friend Charlie Skelton and they wrote a book about it, Once More With Feeling.

In 2008, with her brother Giles, she co-edited an anthology of their father’s writing, Chocolate And Cuckoo Clocks.

In 2009, Victoria’s memoir of a life playing cards, For Richer, For Poorer: A Love Affair With Poker, was published by Canongate, then re-published in paperback in 2011 as For Richer, For Poorer: Confessions Of A Player.

http://www.victoriacoren.com/main/bio...

Miembros

Reseñas

It really is pretty much about poker. If you were expecting a wider biography then you'd be disappointed, but even if you don't play, it's interesting to read about how you get better.
 
Denunciada
paulmorriss | 5 reseñas más. | Dec 29, 2020 |
I like Victoria Coren when I see her on the telly. I follow her on twitter because she's witty and clever but still seems down to earth. So, even though I know nothing about poker, I thought I'd give her poker autobiography a go. It's a mixture of "how I fell in love with poker and the things that were going on in my life" and "how I became the first woman to win the European Poker Tour", with the autobiographical stuff making up the bulk of each chapter and then an analysis of that tournament winning series of games at the end. I had to read a glossary of poker terms to have the vaguest clue about what was going on in the game. I think I got my head around it 3/4s of the way in! Coren writes well, of course. She is honest about poker, affectionate about the poker family she has made, and very entertaining with her turns of phrase. The only card games I've ever played are Whist, Rummy and Pontoon, so maybe I wasn't at quite the disadvantage I thought I was, but I know that I would be useless at poker. All that analysing other people, working out the odds and deciding how much money to risk would tire me out. But then, I am extremely risk averse. Still, I enjoyed the book, even if it didn't turn me into a gambler.… (más)
2 vota
Denunciada
missizicks | 5 reseñas más. | Dec 7, 2014 |
A great read, framing Victoria Corens memoir with the crucial hands of the London EPT she won. Charts the highs and lows of her poker career along with the rest of her life. It's just a really readable book, which made me wish I too had a Tuesday night game to act as my constant in turbulent times!
 
Denunciada
AlisonSakai | 5 reseñas más. | Apr 7, 2012 |
I want to write something considered and intelligent about For Richer, For Poorer, but I keep just coming back to the fact that I loved this book. It is full of the quixoticism of the poker-player but doesn't try to romanticise the game as it charts Coren's evolution as a poker player and the massive changes in the game over the course of her career so far. Each chapter ends with a hand from the EPT championship (which will make more sense if you read the outline of poker at the back - why at the back? Why always at the back?) which has the effect of drawing you through the book, through the pain and the joy, until you discover you're compulsively reading it under the covers at 2am. And it's a good thing. This quixoticism stuff is infectious.… (más)
 
Denunciada
frithuswith | 5 reseñas más. | Jul 13, 2011 |

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280
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