Review of Hold'em's Odd(s) Book
- Title:
- Hold'em's Odd(s) Book
- Author:
- Mike Petriv
- Publisher:
- The Objective Observer, Toronto
- Date:
- 1996
- ISBN:
- 0-968-12230-2
- Pages:
- 207
- Price:
- $24.95
July 11, 1997
Briefly, this book tells you how to calculate the odds of just about
any event occurring at a Texas Hold'em poker table. The book starts with
a review of basic mathematics and probability and then slowly builds the
math necessary to do complicated card odds calculations.
The book solves most problems using a quick-and-dirty calculation, a
detailed calculation, and a computer simulation. It is interesting
to compare one's intuition to a back-of-the-envelope answer and then a
detailed answer. In many cases one's intuition is excellent, in others,
the real odds can be surprising.
This book is a lot less about what the odds are of various Hold'em events
occurring as it is about how to calculate these sorts of card odds. To
be honest, I was expecting, and hoping for, more of the former than
the latter. For myself, I already know how to calculate these odds, I
was interested in finding a place where all the numbers I was interested
in are already calculated. While it should be noted that it's not the
author's fault that this book isn't Percentage Hold'em by Will
Hyde, the book that fulfills the role I was hoping for, I really can't
recommend this book on its own merits.
Setting aside for the moment that the book looks cheap, with its
fixed width font layout, for the money it commands, the book just doesn't
seem terribly substantive to me. The book occupies a fairly narrow
niche in the market. The prospective reader has to be unfamiliar enough
with math not to be comfortable calculating basic probabilities while
not being fearful of the math itself. While I liked the large number of
examples and the quizzes for the readers to test their knowledge, the
presented here could have been covered far more compactly.
Feel free to page through the book and see if it appeals to you, it may
be exactly what you're looking for. It's my opinion that the material
in this book is better covered in other places, such as in Richard
Epstein's The Theory of Gambling and Statistical Logic or David
Sklansky's The Theory of Poker. Although these books don't cover
Hold'em in this depth, they both provide the same foundation in a more
general manner and are much better written. I really can't recommend this
book.
Capsule:
If you want a book on how to calculate the probabilities of various
events occurring in Texas Hold'em, you're not afraid of math, but you're
not well versed in probability theory, this book may be for you. Otherwise,
I'd make sure I had an opportunity to page through it and make sure it's what
I was looking for before buying it.
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