Review of Middle Limit Holdem Poker
- Title:
- Middle Limit Holdem Poker
- Author:
- Bob Ciaffone and Jim Brier
- Publisher:
- self
- Date:
- 2001
- ISBN:
- 0-9661007-4-3
- Pages:
- 332
- Price:
- $25.00
April 6, 2002
Bob Ciaffone should be familiar as a poker columnist and the author of
several excellent poker books. Jim Brier is a columnist for
Card Player magazine who is known for writing quizzes
specifically about mid-limit Texas Hold'em. In Middle Limit
Holdem Poker these two authors team up to write a book focusing
on detailed play of hands in, you guessed it, middle limit Texas Hold'em
poker games.
The book begins by discussing some basic concepts regarding Holdem
poker. Even though this is background, it's immediately clear that
this book targeted at experienced players. The authors assume that the reader
is not only familiar with the game, but also with a significant amount
of poker strategy. This is not a book for beginners. In my opinion,
it's not even a book for intermediate poker players. The concepts
presented in this book are geared toward experienced Hold'em players.
Middle Limit Holdem Poker continues with sections about
the various decision points in a Hold'em hand. Sections cover
preflop, flop, turn, and river play in considerable detail.
Following this are two sections
titled "Special Topics", which deals with issues like bluffing, slow
playing, free cards, etc., and "Non-Standard Games" which covers
short handed play, hands in which players post, and Holdem games that
have unorthodox structures among other topics.
Each section begins by providing some
basic strategic concepts before moving on to extensive quizzes concerning
the topic in question. The book concludes with tables presenting
the mathematical expected outcomes of some common confrontations and
a glossary.
I didn't count the total number of questions in the book, but it's
certainly several hundred. The book is thick for a poker book, and
densely written. It's been quite a while since I've read a gambling
book that took me as much time to read as Middle Limit Holdem
Poker. Certainly, in terms of concepts per dollar, the reader
is getting an excellent value.
Fortunately, this book is also clearly written. There
is never any ambiguity about each lesson the authors are trying to
impart.
While I consider Bob Ciaffone to be among the very top echelon of
poker writers, I found myself disagreeing with a larger share of the
information the authors provide in this book than in others he has written.
Of course,
I can't think of any good reason why anyone should prefer my
recommendations to those of the excellent players who wrote this
book, but I believe that more of the specific recommendations made in this
book are debatable than in, say, Improve Your Poker.
The authors do state that if circumstances are changed even
a little, then the right way to play a particular hand might
change significantly. I also certainly agree that just changing
minor details about a hand, such as the number of callers or a player's
position, can drastically alter correct strategy, and the authors
do a fine job of representing many of these cases. Despite this,
the distinctions between some of the situations described in the book
is often pretty fine. I
would have liked to have seen some sort of rating system to explain
which plays the authors think are a "slam dunk", and about which plays
they might be less certain.
After some of these questions and answers the authors relate what was
the final result of the hand in question. Invariably,
the actual events support the authors' contention about how the hand
ought to be played. While this is fine for educational purposes, I
found this level of certainty to be tiresome after a while.
Just once I would like to have
seen the authors write something like: "Despite an incorrect call on
the turn, our hero caught his two-outer on the river, check-raised the
end, and hauled in a monster pot." Or, maybe they could have written
something like, "After improperly calling
the raise on the turn and a bet on the end with Ace-high/weak kicker
the turn raiser folded his hand without showing it, indicating he was on
a total bluff." To the end of reinforcing the book's advice, which is
generally good, Ciaffone and Brier have pushed my credulity out of my
comfort zone.
In my opinion the book has some significant flaws. Despite this, it has
probably improved my poker game more than any other book I've read in
a long time. The sheer volume of the book is relentless in pounding
generally good advice into the reader, despite the fact that I believe
that variations on the strategies the authors espouse can be equally
effective in the games to which they're referring. I definitely recommend
this book for advanced middle-limit Holdem players, but I caution the
reader to take their time with this book, to examine it with a critical
eye, and once finished to read it carefully again.
Capsule:
While I disagree with a larger percentage of this book's contents than
I would have expected from a book co-authored by Bob Ciaffone, it has
probably improved my Holdem game more than any other book I've read in
recent years. This book is not light reading. It should take an
advanced student quite a bit of time to absorb all the material it
contains, and this information should not be accepted uncritically.
Those folks who are not sophisticated poker players or who confine their
play to low-limit games can probably pass on Middle Limit Holdem
Poker.
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