Review of Bringing Down the House
- Title:
- Bringing Down the House
- Author:
- Ben Mezrich
- Publisher:
- Free Press
- Date:
- 2002
- ISBN:
- 0-7432-4999-2
- Pages:
- 257
- Price:
- $14.00
March 29, 2006
Only a handful of blackjack card counting teams have gained enough of
a reputation to warrant repeated mention in the blackjack literature.
One of the most famous of these is the MIT team. Actually, there have been
many MIT teams throughout history, sometimes multiple independent teams
from MIT operating simultaneously. However, there has never been a
published account of the adventures of any of the MIT groups. In
Bringing Down the House, Ben Mezrich provides us with
the adventures of one of these teams.
The book is presented through the eyes of team member Kevin Lewis.
Mezrich chronicles his background, recruitment, and training as well
as his rise through the ranks and ultimate culmination of both the
story line and his team. The story is a familiar one to those who
are well-read on the blackjack literature, it's a game of
cat-and-mouse between the card counters and the casinos. As is
often the case in these stories, the reader can't always be sure
who is playing which role at any one point in time.
Mezrich obviously learned a great deal about playing blackjack over
the course of researching and writing this book, but he's still
no blackjack expert. Consequently, those who are familiar with
the ins and outs of advantage blackjack, especially team play,
won't find any techniques or tactics that haven't been covered
more exhaustively in other sources. This is an entertaining
story aimed at a mass market rather than a handbook on team
blackjack play. However, the book is well written and the plot
line is absorbing, so the author more than succeeds in achieving
his primary goals.
Mezrich's lack of hard-core blackjack experience and the book's
mass-market aims occasionally leave a sour taste in my mouth.
For example, from the way the book is written one might logically
come to the conclusion that the main characters in this book
invented team blackjack play. From the account in
Bringing Down the House, the reader might get the
impression that the casinos were completely unprepared for
these tactics. Of course, that ignores the fact that everything
the MIT team did in this book was already carefully chronicled in
Ken Uston's book, The Big Player, published 17 years
before the first events in this book occur.
Nonetheless, even though Bringing Down the House follows
a familiar plot line for blackjack story books, the story is well
told and engaging enough to be entertaining both to serious blackjack
players and to those who aren't. I'm glad to finally be able to
read details about the exploits of one of the famed MIT blackjack
teams. I enjoyed this book, and I can definitely recommend it.
Capsule:
Bringing Down the House covers familiar material, the
story of the victories and travails of a successful blackjack team
competing against the casinos, but this one is written well enough
to make the material seem fresher than I might have expected. This
is the story of one of the infamous MIT blackjack teams written for
a mass audience, which means that it's probably not as detailed as
serious blackjack students, myself included, might like. Still, it'
s entertaining, and well worth reading.
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