Review of The Greatest Book of Poker for Winners
- Title:
- The Greatest Book of Poker for Winners
- Author:
- George Epstein with Dr. Daniel E. Abrams
- Publisher:
- T/C Press
- Date:
- 2001
- ISBN:
- 0-938-64843-8
- Pages:
- 296
- Price:
- $24.95
December 31, 2001
In The Greatest Book of Poker for Winners, George "The Engineer"
Epstein provides his formula for winning at poker, including his "Four Basic
Rules and Strategies for Winning the Game of Poker". A career engineer in
the aerospace industry, Epstein attempts to apply engineering principles
to the game of poker.
The book begins with a 50 page first chapter titled "Introduction".
While providing the standard introductory fare and motivation for his book,
Epstein also provides here an introduction to poker terminology, the
basic mechanics of playing 7 Card Stud in a casino setting, some sample
poker room rules and regulations, as well as other information. One doesn't
have to read very far into this book in order to gather that its
focus is on low-limit poker games. Reading a little further
will provide ample evidence that despite what it says in the forward,
this book is aimed at an audience of beginners.
In chapter 2, the author expounds upon his "Four Basic Poker Rules for
Winning".
While these four rules are generally sound poker advice, they contain no
information that hasn't already been discussed, often more thoroughly
and more clearly, in countless other poker books. Some of these ideas I
don't agree with, such as Epstein's general strategy of setting session loss
limits. For some people, especially those prone to steaming or who have a
block preventing them from properly evaluating a game, this may be good
advice. On the other hand,
a lot of what the author presents as general recommendations are really
only his preferences and shouldn't be given the weight ascribed to them
in this book. As another example of this tendancy, Epstein indicates his
strong preference for
Las Vegas style spread-limit no-ante Stud games as opposed to the ante limit
games played in California. His reasons for this are based on stylistic
preferences, not on a comparison of the hourly value of these games to
a skilled player.
The next two chapters cover strategy considerations for playing 7 Card Stud.
His recommendations are based largely upon playing the no-ante games the
author
prefers. As applied to ante games, I feel that several of his recommendations
are less aggressive than what is optimal and shouldn't be followed.
Even in no-ante games, I would recommend against adopting several of his
strategies. As an example, he spends
relatively little time discussing how to use bets and raises for the express
purpose of squeezing other players out of the pot in order to get heads-up
with a single opponent, an absolutely key strategy in the game of 7 Card Stud.
The next chapter covers the game of Texas Hold'em, written by co-author
Dr. Daniel E. Abrams. There's very little
of substance here, and quite a few better introductions to this game
are available in other books. While the author's emphasis on tight play
is certainly good advice, this often goes too far. It's just wrong
to state that players who play only AKs or better Hold'em hands
will "be a winning player at any level." Further, as in other chapters,
I believe that the style of play this book advocates is much
more passive than is desirable. In my opinion, this is less of a mistake
in Stud than in Hold'em, where playing very passively is usually quite
costly.
The last three chapters cover poker psychology, higher ante games and
tipping, and the book includes a special chapter encouraging senior
citizens to play
poker. Again, there's nothing ground breaking in these chapters, and
in general they often represent more of a "what works for me" attitude
than provide any strong reasoning for the positions they take. As an
example, Epstein states that a player should tip and what typical tipping
ranges are, but provide no direct advice on how much a winning player
should tip. Without this information, there isn't really any
substantive advice for the reader.
Besides the information in this book not being terribly interesting, in
my opinion the book isn't very well written. The Greatest Book of
Poker for Winners lacks focus in many places, jumping from one
topic to the next without an overall sense of coherence.
On a stylistic note, I'm not a big fan of
interrupting the text periodically with almost tautological affirmations,
excessive use of exclamation points (especially in the early parts of the
book), and replacing the word "money" with dollar signs.
However, even
if the book were professionally edited and its style were more to my liking,
the bottom line is that this just isn't a very good book. While there
certainly exist poor and beginning players who would benefit from the
information it contains, there are just so many books that are better
introductions to beating the game of poker that I simply cannot recommend
The Greatest Book of Poker for Winners to any audience.
Capsule:
In many places, I found
The Greatest Book of Poker for Winners to be difficult to
read due to stylistic decisions, typographic choices, and a general lack
of focus. However, the book's greater shortcomings are a combination of
providing advice that has been better covered in other
books along with recommendations that have a very restricted utility or are
simply bad advice. I really cannot recommend this book to anyone.
Note: I received a free review copy of this book from the publisher.
I have no other interest, financial or otherwise, in the success of
this book.
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