• About Us
  • Advertising
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community
  • Politics
  • Art & Culture
  • Local Business
  • Environment
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
The Tawny Frogmouth
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community
  • Politics
  • Art & Culture
  • Local Business
  • Environment
The Tawny Frogmouth
Home » Online Articles » So many poker faces in Poker Protocol
Art & Culture

So many poker faces in Poker Protocol

Paige TurnerBy Paige TurnerMarch 28, 20233 Mins Read
Paige Turner with Poker Protocol
Paige Turner keeps her poker face covered

Reading Anne Maria Nicholson’s third novel Poker Protocol, I couldn’t get Lady Gaga’s best-selling single of 2009 “Poker Face” out of my head. I hadn’t thought of that song for a long time. Despite the 12-year gap between it and Nicholson’s book, the two were entwined for me.

Regardless of whether you’re a poker player (and I am not, and never will be) we all know what it means to have a poker face. In Nicholson’s book all the characters work hard to keep their poker faces glued on and not just at the poker table.

The book is set slap bang in the heart of Manly. It feels so familiar that I was guessing which café Leo was patronising and which medical centre Kristen worked in. I could see tax lawyer Max appearing in Manly Court for a refugee but struggled to imagine a corporate tax lawyer having a clue about what to actually say or do in that, or any, Court situation. Then there’s Greg, Kristen’s husband, who I struggled to see what kind Kristen saw in him. Tully is the former front line news reporter who is a complex character with plenty of issues and the elusive but likeable Eugenie is a maths genius.

The thing that connects these disparate characters is their love of playing their monthly poker game. The heart of Poker Protocol is Kristen. She’s got a big heart, a soul, a conscious and an unending ability to care for others.

The book has all the elements of a Shakespearian play or Puccini opera. There’s love, lust, hate, betrayal, greed, envy, hardship, deaths, regrets, gender fluidity and some very deep superficiality.

Nicholson’s strength is how she makes you care about these people. In the first 50 pages or so I was utterly disinterested in them. Using a perfectly paced slow reveal Nicholson keeps you questioning your initial views about this cast of characters and then keeps you guessing about what might happen and what you’d like to happen. It’s not just a story about the main five characters and the choices they make.  It’s a comment on contemporary Australian life and the choices we make, or don’t even know we’re making.

Anne Maria Nicholson knows how to write. You’d expect no less from someone who was a journalist and current affairs journalist and presenter for 20 years with the ABC. Among the many pleasures in reading Poker Protocol is how it interweaves current affairs into the story; dealing with post-COVID-19 life, catastrophes in New Zealand, the ongoing nightmare of Australia’s treatment of refugees and an obsession with the price of real estate.

It’s this blend of current affairs, life in Manly, the big and small dramas of five people who would probably never have got to know each other were it not for poker and Nicholson’s skill at making you feel you’re the sixth person at the poker table that makes this book an absolute winner.

So, why is Gaga’s Poker Face swilling around in my head?  It’s a catchy tune that’s hard to get out of your head once it’s implanted and it’s all about bluffing, no one can read my poker face, my p-p-p-p-poker face!

The best thing about Poker Protocol is that by the end of it those poker faces are gone.

 

Shop local and get your copy of Poker Protocol from Humphreys on The Corso Manly or Berkelouw Books in Balgowlah, it’s available on Amazon and Booktopia, available as an ebook too.

 

Issue 26 Paige Turner Reviews
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

Related Posts

Cover Artist… Cindy Scharka

Beaches salute Rock Gods Rose Tattoo

Book review: The Jar of Dreams and Everything and Nothing

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Stories from Past Tawnies

Northern Beaches Council: Housing changes to hit the ‘Beaches

February 24, 2026

Ben Brown: The Godfather of Beaches weirdos

September 26, 2024

When the accidental counsellor is you

September 23, 2021

Cover Artist… Holly Mahoney

March 29, 2024

Notes from the Director’s seat – with Wesley Enoch

July 20, 2023

We Reel Rock You

March 8, 2023

Lifeline Northern Beaches’ new CEO

January 5, 2024

Has anyone stepped up for koalas yet?

October 30, 2024

Kamaroi’s Class of 2023

June 26, 2023

The Indigenius Project

June 20, 2022

Artelan’s Smoke Screen of elegant deception

July 23, 2022

Behind every plaque there is a story

September 26, 2021

Archer Surfboards

November 27, 2024

The power of volunteering

April 25, 2025

There’s more to Bluebottles than you’d think…

March 1, 2025
Our Mag

Online Articles

Back Issues

Media

Advertising

Advertising

Media Kit

Say Hi!

Contact Us

Support Us

Tip Jar

Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
© 2026 The Tawny Frogmouth

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.