Did Phil Ivey ever publish a first‑person memoir or authorized autobiography?

Checked on February 3, 2026
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Executive summary

A review of the provided reporting finds multiple third‑party biographies and fan‑oriented books about Phil Ivey but no evidence in these sources of a first‑person memoir or an authorized autobiography written by Ivey himself; the material available is uniformly authored by others or marketed as biography [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]. The records here document independently published retrospectives and children's biographies, as well as speaker‑bureau synopses, but do not include any title presented as a Phil Ivey first‑person memoir or an authorized autobiography [1] [7].

1. Known biographies: multiple third‑party accounts, not a memoir

A cluster of books and listings in the supplied reporting describe Phil Ivey through biographies written by other authors or commercial compilers — for example, Mastering the Cards: The Untold Story of Phil Ivey’s Poker Odyssey (independently published, Nov. 21, 2023) and several similarly titled “definitive” or career‑focused volumes [1] [6] [4] [5]. These entries consistently present Ivey as the subject rather than the author, framing their content as biographies or tributes rather than memoirs and indicating outside authorship or independent publishing arrangements [1] [4] [5].

2. Children's books and fan pieces populate the market, reinforcing third‑party authorship

The supplied results also include a children’s biography and simplified accounts aimed at younger readers — for instance, Phil Ivey: The Boy Who Turned Poker Into A Science — which are explicitly described as biographies and educational stories rather than firsthand recollections by Ivey [3] [8]. These titles reinforce the pattern in the available reporting: publishers and authors are packaging Ivey’s life and strategy as interpretive narratives for different audiences, not as memoirs penned or authorized by Ivey [3].

3. Industry listings and promotional pages echo the absence of a personal memoir

A speaker‑bureau profile and event booking pages for Phil Ivey present biographical summaries and career highlights for promotional use, again functioning as third‑party biographies rather than first‑person works; the All American Speakers listing is a clear example of such a promotional bio that compiles facts for bookings rather than offering an Ivey‑authored life story [7]. The supplied reporting therefore shows an ecosystem of third‑party profiles and commercial biographies, which would likely surface an authorized autobiography if one existed within these public channels [7].

4. What the sources do not show — and why that matters

None of the provided snippets or listings present a title as an “autobiography,” “memoir,” or authored by “Phil Ivey” in the first person; instead they are attributed to other writers or to independent publishers compiling the story of his career [1] [4] [5] [6]. Because the current corpus is limited to these sources, it is not possible to categorically rule out the existence of a memoir outside this dataset, but within the reporting at hand there is no documented, published first‑person memoir or authorized autobiography by Phil Ivey [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6].

5. Alternative explanations and commercial incentives

The prevalence of biographies by others suggests market demand for stories about Ivey, which can incentivize independent authors and small publishers to produce unauthorized or unauthorized‑style biographies rather than wait for an official memoir; this dynamic can explain why multiple outsider accounts appear in the reporting while an authorized self‑narrative does not [1] [4]. It is also consistent with celebrity publishing patterns where subject cooperation varies; however, the supplied material does not include statements from Ivey or a publisher confirming any authorized memoir project [1] [6].

6. Bottom line

Based on the reporting provided, there is no evidence here that Phil Ivey has published a first‑person memoir or an authorized autobiography; the books and listings found are biographies and profiles written by others or produced for promotional purposes [1] [2] [3] [4] [7] [5] [6]. If confirmation from Ivey, his representatives, or a major publisher is required, that information does not appear in the supplied sources and would need to be sought in additional reporting or publisher records.

Want to dive deeper?
Has Phil Ivey ever announced plans for a memoir or commented publicly on writing a book?
Which major publishers have released books about Phil Ivey and are any described as authorized?
How do independent biographies of living public figures differ legally and editorially from authorized autobiographies?