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Poker Strategy And Book Reviews For Thinking Players

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Category: 5 Star


Review: Sklansky on Poker

26 May, 2008 | 3 Star, 5 Star, Book Reviews

Author: David Sklansky

Publisher: 2+2 Publishing

Sklansky on Poker is a little known 2+2 book. It started life as Sklansky on Razz. Only one problem - no one plays razz anymore except for the occasional HORSE game and a few medium stakes online games. So what 2+2 did is take the orginal text, tack some essays by Sklansky on the front, take razz out of the title, and voila - a new book for the 21st century.

You’ll notice that I gave this book two different star ratings. That’s not a mistake. The 5-star rating is for the essays. The 3-star rating is for the old Sklansky on Razz text.

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Review: Harrington on Cash Games Volume 1

5 April, 2008 | 5 Star, Book Reviews

Subtitle: How to Win at No-Limit Hold’em Money Games

Author: Dan Harrington & Bill Robertie

Publisher: 2+2

Finally. Two plus two has put out two books on NL holdem cash games in the last few years. Sklansky & Miller’s No Limit Holdem - Theory and Practice was marginal. Profesional No Limit Holdem Volume 1 was a complete turd. Both were far inferior to what Doyle wrote in Supersystem. This created the absurd situation where the most popular poker game today had only one chapter in one book addressing it in a decent manner. Enter Dan Harrington to rectify the problem. As anyone who doesn’t live under a rock knows, Harrington was responsible for a wildly (and deservedly) popular series of book on NL tournament play. He’s the only author reviewed on CardSharp who has consistently achieved a 5-star rating for his books - not an easy feat since I tend to be stingy with top ratings. Needless to say I was thrilled to hear he was tackling cash game NL.

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Review: Harrington On Holdem Volumes 2 & 3

28 August, 2007 | 5 Star, Book Reviews

Author: Dan Harrington & Bill Robertie

Publisher: 2+2

These two volumes round out the excellent Harrington on Holdem series.  Like the previous volume, the cover no limit holdem tournament play exclusively.  Volume 2 begins with a section on making moves and bluffing that belonged in Volume 1 but was moved for space constraints.  Then it moves on to the heart of the series - Harrington’s system for handling rising blinds and antes and shorthanded tables.  Those are the conditions found in the later stages of a tournament, and are the place where many players fall down.

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Review: Improve Your Poker

28 July, 2007 | 5 Star, Book Reviews

Author: Bob Ciaffone

Publisher: Self Published

Authors of poker manuals face a bit of a conundrum. The readers are presumably reading poker books because their poker game is not what it should be. In other words, the readers have some misconceptions about the game that need to be fixed. This makes it very hard to write an advanced poker book, because to do so you have to assume your readers already know basic material (or else write a monster book that contains everything) yet you KNOW that the readers are confused on some points. Perhaps parts of the basic material you’re assuming they know.

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Review: The Mathematics of Poker

28 July, 2007 | 5 Star, Book Reviews

Author: Bill Chen & Jerrod Ankenman

Publisher: Conjelco

This book attempts a fundamental methodological shift in the way scholarly players approach the game of poker.

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Review: Harrington on Holdem Volume 1

28 July, 2007 | 5 Star, Book Reviews

Author: Dan Harrington & Bill Robertie

Publisher: 2+2

This book focuses on the fundamentals of playing no limit holdem in a tournament setting (although much of the information is also applicable to cash games). The book covers starting hand selection & various topics in postflop play at a full table. It doesn’t assume the reader has a particularly deep poker background. Those who have more experience with the game may find the book a little “beginnerish” but it sets a solid foundation for the more advanced material in the next two volumes.

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Review: The Theory of Poker

27 July, 2007 | 5 Star, Book Reviews

Author: David Sklansky

Publisher: 2+2 Publishing

The Theory of Poker is far and away the best of the 2+2 poker books, and indeed is likely the best poker book ever published. Instead of providing instruction on a particular poker game, it explains the mathematics and logic behind all forms of poker. It teaches you how to think about poker, so that when you encounter a new situation you haven’t previously studied, you can reason out the right play on the spot. It’s the “why” to every other book’s “how”.

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