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Until recently, live poker in
casinos has been in steep decline. Many Nevada card
rooms have closed, and most casinos in newer gaming
jurisdictions never added poker because space is
more profitably used on slot machines. But thanks to
televised poker on the Travel Channel and ESPN,
poker - especially Texas holdem - is on a popularity
surge.
Never before in history
has poker been more popular - HoldEm Poker, to be
specific. It's an easy game to learn - you're dealt
two cards and combine them with five community cards
to make your best five-card hand. But what happens
in between the deal and the final card (called the
"river" card) is what makes it very interesting.
Position, the bluff factor and often the term
"all-in" have even greater impact. You must
understand what "tells" are (subconscious moves by
head, eyes, or hands to indicate or hide happiness
or disappointment) and you have to deal with the
luck factor.
Originally called Hold
Me Darling and Hold Me (some say it originally was a
gimmicky home poker game, like Old Maid), this game
evolved into one called HoldEm in the late 1970s
with the help of a fantastic must-read book titled
HoldEm Poker by David Sklansky (113 pages,
paperbound, $19.95).
Sklansky and his partner
in writing and publishing, Mason Malmuth, have
collaborated on more than a dozen books and are
among the most respected authors internationally.
With the tournament
attention ESPN has provided with the World Poker
Tour and reruns of the past World Series of Poker at
Binion's Horseshoe in Las Vegas, it's estimated
several million new players have begun to play, both
in person and on the Internet. Many have learned to
play by observation - but the better ones have read
a book or two before venturing from their home games
into a real casino or card room.
For those who need a
little nudge or guidance on what books will help a
beginner, here's a quick list of suggested readings.
Think of poker as an investment course. You
certainly wouldn't buy a car, some stock or land
without some research, would you? Hopefully not. So
take my advice (I've been reading, ordering, editing
books for more than 25 years). Here are some of the
best.
Recommended for
beginners are:
HoldEm Poker, by David
Sklansky. Sklansky discusses how important the first
two cards are; what you should look for in a "good
flop," and follows with vital information on
bluffing, check-raising, playing head-up and reading
"tells." Originally published in 1976 and updated
many times to reflect changing rules and theories,
it remains the book that created millions of players
and revealed material only the pros knew in the
early days.
HoldEm Excellence (From
Beginner to Winner), by Lou Krieger (173 pages,
paperbound, $19.95). Helps the beginner go from home
game to casino action - encourages the beginner to
learn even from mistakes, get mentally fit,
understand the importance of position, and
understand when to raise and why. The book also
places some emphasis on money management and
rationale for keeping records of your play.
Get The Edge at
Low-Limit HoldEm, by Bill Burton (284 pages,
paperbound, $14.95) not only offers the basics -
including what starting hands to play; table
position, and proper times to check, raise fold or
check-raise - but also explains how to size up your
opponents and their playing styles, and how to win
in low-limit tournaments.
Winning Low-Limit HoldEm,
by Lee Jones (198 pages, paperbound, $24.95). One of
the all-time best sellers. Jones' reputation as a
writer, player and theorist is solid. Packed with
examples of good and bad hands; with a quiz after
key chapters to check your memory and comprehension,
he explains odds, pot odds and implied odds; play
pre-flop in early, middle and late position; how to
play various types of flops, from one pair, two pair
to a straight or flush draw.
Play Poker Like the
Pros, by Phil Hellmuth Jr. (394 pages, paperbound,
$15.95). Rarely does a world-class poker player (he
won the Binion's World Series of Poker in 1989 - the
youngest player ever to do so) write a poker book.
But this rarity is a best seller. It has a major
section on low-limit HoldEm, plus sections on
intermediate and advanced strategies. It contains a
chapter on no-limit and tournament play, then moves
to other games like Omaha and Seven Stud.
Educational, colorful and entertaining.
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