Hold’Em Poker for Advanced Players

  • ISBN13: 9781880685228
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Average Rating: 4.0
Price: $13.25




Product Description
Texas Hold ’em is not an easy game to play well. To become an expert you must balance many concepts, some of which occasionally contradict each other. In 1988, the first edition appeared. Many ideas, which were only known to a small, select group of players, were made available to anyone who was striving to become an expert, and the hold ’em explosion had begun. It is now a new century, and the authors have again moved the state of the art forward by adding over 100 pages of new material, including extensive sections on “loose games,” and “short-handed games.” Anyone who studies this text, is well disciplined, and gets the proper experience should become a significant winner. Some of the other ideas discussed include play on the first two cards, semi-bluffing, the free card, inducing bluffs, staying with a draw, playing when a pair flops, playing trash hands, desperation bets, playing in wild games, reading hands, and psychology…. More >>

Hold’Em Poker for Advanced Players

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5 Responses to “Hold’Em Poker for Advanced Players”

  1. Jason Randall Nash 14. Mar, 2008 at 12:33 am #

    This is simply the best Hold’em book ever written.

    The first half of the book follows a traditional style. The authors cover opening hands, position, the “if you’re checking a lot, you’re a [bad] player” philosophy, calculating basic pot odds, and a variety of other topics essential to your game. This half of the book should be memorized. Don’t kid yourself; if you don’t know how to play a suited jack/nine from the fifth position, you will not win consistently playing Hold’em. Calculating pot odds separates the men from the boys, but you will need to get a copy of the Theory of Poker to truly cover that topic.

    The second half of the book is a wealth of short essays covering topics ranging from how to play especially difficult hands to more general topics such a slow-play and the semi-bluff. I can’t tell you how helpful this part of the book is. For a newbie, there is too much information here to absorb, but just reading the text will help you recognize when players are using these techniques against you. With time, you will learn how to use these techniques yourself.

    The second part of the book also is an excellent reference for those times in a game when you just were not sure what the correct play was. Make a mental note when that happens and bust out this book when you get home. More than likely, you will find the information you need to make the correct play the next time. Keep in mind that when you’re not sure how to play out a hand, your opponent likely has the same problems. If you learn from these difficult, often misplayed hands, you can gain a significant advantage over your fellow-players.

    Bottom line: Read this book over and over again until you can recall it line by line while sitting at the table. There is not a better way to spend your time than reading this book if you want to increase your hourly take at the Hold’em table.

    Five Enthusiastic Stars – HawkeyeGK
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. Rick Van Hazel 14. Mar, 2008 at 2:02 am #

    When I first bought this book i wasnt technically an advanced player. I understood the game, the rules, and many plays from just playing poker a lot. The problem with Hold’em is no matter how many books you read, you are destined to loose hundereds or thousands of dollars in the process of your Hold’em education. We have books like this one to give tips on how to cut down on the cost of your education. Honestly, if you’re a regular player at the game of Hold’em you got to have this book for your collection. I say collection because all Hold’em players have a book collection :)

    Must reads:
    David Sklansky’s – Theory of Poker
    Doyle Brunson’s – The Super System

    The absolute must of them all
    = Mike Caro’s – Book of Poker Tells

    This book gets more in to detail of things to do in certain situations or variations of Hold’em than it does about basics of the game. I really dont think anyone is going to get lost buying this book and being a beginner. You at least need to know what the basics of the game are, which can be learned by watching the World Poker Tour or World Series of Poker on TV. What David goes into more are Low limit, high limit, loose games, tight games, etc. and tips on what to do in certain situations against many or few opponents.

    I cant really say too much more that hasnt been said in all the other reviews. There is a lot of good info in this book. The bottom line is, for this game you must be as educated as possible about every kind of play there is. If you learn one thing in this book that will gain or save you a pot that you wouldn’t have walked away with, then it has most likely paid for itself right then and there!
    Rating: 5 / 5

  3. Dave in Cali 14. Mar, 2008 at 2:34 am #

    This is one of the books on the “required reading” list for the Poker Discussion Group in San Diego. It is really absolute must reading for anyone who intends to play Texas Hold’em in a casino and wants to be a winner. One notable thing regarding this book is that if you have not read “Hold’em Poker” by David Sklansky, this book may not make much sense to you. It really is for advanced players, and describes many plays that are sophisticated and beyond the scope of a beginning book on poker. The hand rankings are critical for beginners learning the difficult art of pre-flop play. The advanced plays described in some of the later chapters become the basis for winning play after the flop, particularly at the middle limits. Some of the plays are not all that useful in the small limit games, but the section on “loose games” is critical for beginning players learning how to navigate large multiway pots. Overall, this book is must reading, and anyone who hasn’t read it is probably not going to be playing anywhere near optimally, no matter what limit of Texas hold’em they play.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  4. Bitter Chris 14. Mar, 2008 at 3:57 am #

    I was furious after I read some of the other reviews of this book. I looked only out of curiousity, considering I had already read (and reread) this book four year ago- before Varkonyi won the WSOP on ESPN or the WPT was being televised on the Travel Channel. The fact was, this book changed my life and my playing to a degree where I considered myself semi-professional. If you want a book on “How-to-begin-learning-poker” get Skalansky’s skinny book on Hold ‘em. But these pages are packed solid with enough information to make the book seem even heavier in your hands than the number of pages implies. Markus Damanski from Germany found it hard to understand, maybe english is not his first language. Jamie Landry from Seattle said she had to read it two whole times before she gleened a couple ideas from it! wow. And J. Gelling from NY gave it one star with an example quote to illustrate it’s complexity which he could not follow.

    BUT… my response is: Noam Chomsky was not easy to get through. St. Thomas Aquinas made me want to pull my hair out. J.R.R. Tolkien’s Silmerillian is just a bunch of nonsensical words! My points are as follows:

    1. THERE IS NO OTHER PLACE TO FIND THE INFORMATION PRESENTED IN THIS BOOK. I have read them all. Yes, all of them. Many times.

    2. THERE IS NO WAY TO PRESENT THIS INFORMATION IN A MORE PRECISE FASHION THAN IT IS. I had to read sentences, paragraphs, and whole pages over and over and over again until I understood it too (just like Chomsky & Aquinas), but there is no way I could I have said it more succinctly.

    3. THEY ASSERT THAT SINCE SKLANSKY OFTEN REFERS TO LIMIT HOLD EM ON HIS LESSONS, IT HAS LITTLE OR NO VALUE IN NO LIMIT HOLD EM. Wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong. I could not reasonably move up to no limit hold em until I could understand and apply (with dicipline) the ideas and theories he presents for limit games.

    I play all over CA and NV at medium stakes ($5/$10 No Limit or $10/$20 Limit) against dozens of old men and young rookies (I’m only 28) who think they know it all. But it only takes a conversation at a short smoke break or a couple rounds of the blinds to recognize the basic theories they lack. And they scoff at me, “bah, i never read those damn books, sonny.”

    Well, most of us are not smart enough to have spontaneous knowledge of complex ideas. The next best thing we can hope for is to be smart enough to follow the line of logic of smarter men than us like Einstein, Chomsky, Aquinas, and yes, even Sklansky. If you can’t follow their advanced theories yet, go back and reread the basics.

    I shudder to think of reading an Einstein book for “Advanced Physicists” less than reading an idiot’s review of it.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  5. Griffin 14. Mar, 2008 at 4:55 am #

    Worth it’s weight in gold? Hardly. Worthwhile to read several times? Definately.

    Overall, this is a solid, advanced poker book. It is full of numerically based, money making advice as well as intricate “plays” designed to extract the most value from a hand.

    With that being said, the reader must be warned that the author, in addition to being a solid poker player, is a busnessman and is aware of the money this book will make you if you take it’s advice. Thus the hefty price tag.

    I should stress that this is an ADVANCED book. The author makes the assumption that you are playing with tight agressive SMART players. If you are consistantly playing low limits and getting beat by idiots drawing out on you this book will not solve your problems (i.e. it is intended for $5/10 and up limits.) Additionally, if you have not played quite a bit of hold em’, you might not fully understand the value of some of the advice that this book has to offer.

    Overall I highly recommend this book along with the shorter, hold em’ book (titled “Texas Hold em’” I believe) by the same authors. The information is solid and will undoubtedly help your game.
    Rating: 4 / 5

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