Maria Konnikova

Maria Konnikova

New York Times Best-Selling Author, Journalist and Professional Poker Player

A woman with long brown hair, wearing a black top and a necklace, looks at the camera and smiles against a plain light background.

Maria Konnikova is the author of The Biggest Bluff, a New York Times bestseller, one of the Times’ “100 Notable Books of 2020,” and a finalist for the Telegraph Best Sports Writing Awards for 2021. Her previous books are the bestsellers: The Confidence Game, winner of the 2016 Robert P. Balles Prize in Critical Thinking, and Mastermind: How to Think Like Sherlock Holmes, an Anthony and Agatha Award finalist.

Konnikova is a regularly contributing writer for The New Yorker whose writing has won numerous awards, including the 2019 Excellence in Science Journalism Award from the Society of Personality and Social Psychology. While researching for The Biggest Bluff, Konnikova became an international poker champion and the winner of over $300,000 in tournament earnings — and inadvertently turned into a professional poker player. Konnikova’s writing has been featured in Best American Science and Nature Writing and has been translated into over twenty languages.

Konnikova also hosts the podcast The Grift from Panoply Media, a show that explores con artists and the lives they ruin. Her podcasting work earned her a National Magazine Award nomination in 2019.

She graduated from Harvard University and received her Ph.D. in psychology from Columbia University.

You can learn to argue with yourself. That’s actually how I get a lot of my thinking done. 
For whatever reason being in nature helps people become better at problem solving.
Experts should trust all of their instincts and their common sense in their areas of expertise. The problem comes when non-experts have "common sense opinion" that really is just coming out of nowhere. 
3 min
What are the things that I want to remember and that I want to be able to access later on and focus on remembering how to access them? And then […]
5 min
How can we train our brains to think like Sherlock Holmes? This question occupies Konnikova’s book, and her answer can be summed up in one word: mindfulness. Mindfulness is “staying […]
Today marks my last blog for Artful Choice. It has been an exciting year of writing about decisions small and big and the forces that help shape them and make […]
From an evolutionary perspective, our quickness to judge faces certainly makes sense. We need to know if someone is friend or foe, if he is strong or weak, if we can trust him or not. And we need to know quickly, before something bad happens. But is that quickness still as good when it determines national political outcomes?