21: Bringing Down the House - Movie Tie-In

by Ben Mezrich
21: Bringing Down the House - Movie Tie-In  
published January 29th 2008 by Free Press
first published 2002
binding Paperback
isbn 1416564195   (isbn13: 9781416564195)
pages 272
description It's Friday night and you're on a red-eye to the city of sin. Strapped to your chest is half a million dollars; in your overnight bag is another twent...more
date added
06-28-07



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 4453)



Brian
04/11/08

Read in April, 2008
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Toby
06/28/08

Read in September, 2004
"Bringing Down the House: The Inside Story of Six M.I.T. Students Who Took Vegas for Millions" by Ben Mezrich is a nonfiction work that takes a look at a group of MIT graduates and dropouts who develop and perfect a card counting system, which they use to great effect. Specifically, the book concerns Kevin Miller, who is apparently Asian despite the inventive pseudonym, and his involvement with the team of MIT card counters.

As I read this book, I kept flipping back to the frontispi...more
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Merry
Merry rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
03/17/08

Read in March, 2008
Number: 12
ISBN: 9781416561705
Rating: B

Summary www.bn.com

It's Friday night and you're on a red-eye to the city of sin. Strapped to your chest is half a million dollars; in your overnight bag is another twenty-five thousand in blackjack chips; and your wallet holds ten fake IDs. As soon as you land in Las Vegas, you are positive you are being investigated and followed. To top it all off, the IRS is auditing you, someone has been going through your mail -- and you have a multivariable c...more
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Brian Hodges
bookshelves: non-fiction
Read in January, 2008
Let me say this first: read the book. SCREW THE MOVIE!

I picked up this book because the trailers for the movie "21" (based on the book) intrigued me. I'm no speed reader but i finished this thing in two reading sessions less than 24 hours after getting it from the library. It's the TRUE story (as the title indicates) of a bunch of MIT students, brilliant with numbers, who work out a sophisticated card-counting scheme that they use to win millions of dollars from various casinos over...more
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Kevin
03/22/08

Gambling has been one of humankind's obsessions for nearly as long as humans have existed if you buy into historians' claims. So if wagering money on a game of chance dates back to ancient times, the likelihood is pretty good that that almost the same amount of time has been spent trying to figure out how to beat these games.

In the early 90s, Kevin Lewis, an M.I.T. mathematics student, was introduced to the institute's Blackjack Club by a couple friends. While is may sound innocent enough to...more
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Dawn
05/22/08

Well, the subtitle gives the plot away. But Kevin and his MIT buddies were an interesting--albeit profane--crew to get to know these past couple days.

Admittedly I was captivated. It's an amazing story and Mezrich does a fantastic job as he re-tells the Vegas coup. And yeah, I love it when the average guy can stick it to an element that I find basically corrupt. Who doesn't want the corporate gambling casinos to go down when every day they rip people off? The book highlights how these super m...more
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Ken
Ken rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
04/01/08

Read in March, 2008
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Tracey
09/14/07

Read in March, 2004
recommends it for: fans of Vegas, looking for a tale about some kids who beat the house.... for a while
I can't quite remember where I heard about Bringing Down the House: The Inside Story of Six M.I.T. Students Who Took Vegas for Millions, but I had it on my Library To Read list; then last December I picked it up at a half-price bookstore.

Mezrich follows the involvement of Kevin Lewis, an Asian-American MIT student, in a card counting scheme that over the course of about 5 years swept into Vegas and other casino areas and made millions of dollars. Most of the story is told as flashbacks, wit...more
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whatthedeuce
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Scott
03/08/08

Read in March, 2008
Ah, Blackjack and the flashy, magnetic draw of America's Playground. Why do we foolishly appease Vegas, allowing it to offer it's tantalizing promises like a carrot dangling in front of a rabbit? A part of us likes to think we can GET the carrot; And it's that part of us that keeps us coming back like lemmings. Well in this story, the rabbit got the carrot. And then some.

An extremely fast & entertaining read, this book sweeps you through the highs and lows of what it feels like to tempor...more
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bonnie
03/08/08

Read in March, 2008
I borrowed this book from a friend because I saw the movie preview and became so excited that I was unable to wait for the movie to come out. Bringing Down the House was a quick, fun read. I think I will benefit from having read it when I see the movie, too. However, learning about the hot spy tricks is not going to benefit me at the casino. I may have gone through a card trick phase and almost learned the "Hindu shuffle," but I know my limits. I'm no card counter.

The writing is w...more
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Madeline
recommended to Madeline by: nobody
recommends it for: nobody
i didn't hate it. but it was definitely nothing special.

here's some examples of the ridiculous writing:

"Vegas was a juicy oyster, and Kevin was going to suck the motherfucker dry"

"He leaned back, kicked his feet up onto the table -- right on the goddamn felt -- and waited for them to pay him off. He knew he looked like the most arrogant prick in the world, but he didn't care. Hubris had no place in a card counter's vocabulary. Barry Chow was king of the goddamn paddle...more
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Jessica
Read in April, 2008
Enjoyed the story, though the writing style was a little too glib and cheesy for me. As someone who isn't especially good at math or stats (which is being generous; I'm borderline dyscalculic), I was impressed with the system these students put into place, saying nothing of the skill and finesse with which they managed to carry out the deception. Raises interesting questions on the ethics of card-counting. I realize the narrative is most likely peppered up to be more palatable and exciting, a...more
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Brina
04/19/08

bookshelves: recently-read
Read in April, 2008
This is probably the single most gripping non-fiction book I have ever read. Written like a novel, it tells the story of a group of MIT card counters who make millions in Vegas.

Major thanks to Jami Burke, who wisely told me to read this book rather than seeing the film 21 (which I wouldn't have watched anyway). But while I've never been interested in Las Vegas, card counting, or anything resembling math, Ben Mezrich's book is more like a well-constructed and well-written novel than a ...more
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Michael
bookshelves: liked-it, true-crime
Read in April, 2008
recommended to Michael by: Ultimate reading guide
recommends it for: anyone who wants to try and beat the casinos at their own game
I have wanted to read this book for awhile especially after living in Las Vegas and since the movie based on the book just came out I decided now was the time to read it.

Kevin Lewis was your average MIT student until one day when 2 friends took him to Atlantic City and introduced him to the art of card counting. Counting cards is not illegal but the casinos do not like it when you do it. Especially if you are winning. Taken under the wing of Micky, Kevin learns the ins and outs of card ...more
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Maggie
04/03/08

recommended to Maggie by: Jay Ni
With the recent release of the movie 21, I was really interested in the true story of several MIT students who mastered the art of card counting and milked Vegas for all it was worth. Bringing Down the House is a thrilling and intriguing story of students who pushed the envelope and risked it all on the casino floors, filled with suspense, tension, and humor too. Ben Mezrich does an amazing job adapting the non-fiction story into a narrative point of view, taking on the character Kevin L...more
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Daniel
05/18/08

bookshelves: general-nonfiction
Read in May, 2008
This book is a decently written version of the story told in the recent movie "21." The 'real' story is every bit as suspenseful as the outline the movie provides with the stupid, obviously false details removed; indeed, one wonders why they didn't just hire a director who knew how to make suspenseful movies without actual violence. (It turns out the truth has some real violence in it, just not in Vegas.) Real suspense has more to do with what the characters (and then the audience) fea...more
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Evan
08/08/07

A great book if you like Vegas. A great book if you like blackjack. A great book if you like sticking it to the man. A great book if you like thrillers. A great book if you like real-life people beating the odds through extraordinary skill. It is well...frankly...just a great book. It is an amazing real-life look at how a group of MIT students organized a way to beat the gambling system in blackjack and take millions from the house. I say "amazing" only because these are skills I could...more
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MLE
05/19/08

Read in May, 2008
recommends it for: everyone!
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Chelsea
bookshelves: 2007, memoir, non-fiction, own
Read in October, 2007
I really enjoyed this book. The author gave me more information than I wanted on the actual system the group used to ensure profits; I mostly just skimmed those parts (and ended up skipping the entire afterword, which was an odd rehashing of most of the theory and strategy). I found the jumps in time from chapter to chapter to be unnecessary and a little confusing, but not so much that I wasn't able to follow, and I understand what he was going for.

That said, it was a great read. Fast pac...more
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