Significant bridge books & magazines
#1
Posted 2009-August-26, 11:08
Have you time to study new nice ideas ?
Thanks!
Hamdi
#2
Posted 2009-August-26, 11:32
Yesterday I unexpectedly received a copy of a new book in the mail: "Expert Bridge Simplified" by Jeff Rubens. I read the first two chapters last night. From what I can tell so far, this book appears to be significant.
This book presents various practical approachs to solving bridge problems that require some knowledge of math. Rubens attempts to show that many such problems do not require any serious number crunching or a university degree to at least approximately solve.
For sure this book is not for everyone, but I suspect that a lot of Forums regulars will find it useful and interesting.
Rubens writes very well and has excellent credentials in both bridge analysis and math. His greatest claim to fame is arguably the work he has done in his capacity as the Editor of "The Bridge World" magazine (which I personally consider to be easily the most "significant" bridge magazine in history).
You can subscribe to The Bridge World or order Jeff's new book through:
Link to The Bridge World web site
I don't have a commercial interest in any of this
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
#3
Posted 2009-August-26, 11:50
fred, on Aug 26 2009, 08:32 PM, said:
Yesterday I unexpectedly received a copy of a new book in the mail: "Expert Bridge Simplified" by Jeff Rubens. I read the first two chapters last night. From what I can tell so far, this book appears to be significant.
This book presents various practical approachs to solving bridge problems that require some knowledge of math. Rubens attempts to show that many such problems do not require any serious number crunching or a university degree to at least approximately solve.
In case people haven't heard, I'm working on the companion title: “Beginner’s Bridge Complicated”
This book shows how complex and often extraneous math can turn the most blindingly obvious bridge problem into an exercise in frustration.
Chapter 3, tentatively titled “The Application of Hidden Markov Models to ‘8 Ever, 9 Never’ “ is guaranteed to turn the strongest stomachs. Both bridge players and mathematicians will appreciate the poor punctuation, missing vowels, basic arithmetic errors, and overuse of clichéd stock phrases that characterize my work…
#4
Posted 2009-August-26, 13:53
hrothgar, on Aug 26 2009, 12:50 PM, said:
fred, on Aug 26 2009, 08:32 PM, said:
Yesterday I unexpectedly received a copy of a new book in the mail: "Expert Bridge Simplified" by Jeff Rubens. I read the first two chapters last night. From what I can tell so far, this book appears to be significant.
This book presents various practical approachs to solving bridge problems that require some knowledge of math. Rubens attempts to show that many such problems do not require any serious number crunching or a university degree to at least approximately solve.
In case people haven't heard, I'm working on the companion title: “Beginner’s Bridge Complicated”
This book shows how complex and often extraneous math can turn the most blindingly obvious bridge problem into an exercise in frustration.
Chapter 3, tentatively titled “The Application of Hidden Markov Models to ‘8 Ever, 9 Never’ “ is guaranteed to turn the strongest stomachs. Both bridge players and mathematicians will appreciate the poor punctuation, missing vowels, basic arithmetic errors, and overuse of clichéd stock phrases that characterize my work…
as long as you can add a chapter about post-mortems that uses non-commutative rings, that would be great.
#5
Posted 2009-August-26, 18:56
Morehead On Bidding, Albert H. Morehead (and/or the revised "On Bidding" text modernized by Philip Alder
To Bid Or Not To Bid - The LAW of Total Tricks, Larry Cohen
Bridge: Matchpoints, Kit Woolsey
Thinking About IMPs, John Boeder
Carl
#6
Posted 2009-August-26, 19:05
The book that first got me to go beyond counting my points was Mike Lawrence's Hand Evaluation. I will recommend it to anyone at the good beginner/intermediate level.
For declarer play and defense, I can't recommend anything by Hugh Kelsey enough.
#7
Posted 2009-August-26, 22:40
DHL
#8
Posted 2009-August-28, 08:42
the era's greatest players - Reese, Forquet, Root, Lawrence, Larry Cohen etc.
In my opinion this decade has lacked books by the best players, except for one great book by Meckstroth. Perhaps the current stars are too busy playing pro, producing bridge software (Cohen, Woolsey etc) and doing other things,
and the market for bridge books is not as lucrative as it used to be.
Thus, my bridge reading is mostly older books, Reese and Lawrence classics which I'd overlooked earlier, with not many new bridge books adding new ideas for me.
The Bridge World is generally regarded as the top bridge magazine. There's some great material in Norwegian and Polish bridge magazines for those who can read those languages, and there are bridge magzazines from England, Australia and New Zealand which most people don't rate as highly as TBW. The Bridge Bulletin which the ACBL provides to its members similarly isn't generally rated as highly.
#9
Posted 2009-November-19, 08:04
Hamdi: My favourite is "Bridge with the Blue Team" by Pietro Forquet. It isn't the most instructive book, but if you want to be impressed by pure bridge genius, it is a must read.
#10
Posted 2009-November-19, 08:18
hrothgar, on Aug 26 2009, 12:50 PM, said:
It's a bit of a flooded market, I'm afraid.
"gwnn" said:
hanp does not always mean literally what he writes.
#11
Posted 2009-November-19, 08:54
- "The complete book of..." series. "Mike Lawrence actually wrote..." is often heard in pre- and post-mortems between me and my regular partner. Especially the books about doubles and overcalls are high on my list.
- "Play Bridge with Mike Lawrence". I love this book. It's an over-the-shoulder book where the reader follows Mike through an MP tournament. It's spiced with wry observations of opponents, partner, bidding disasters etc. I like how not every deal is a gem where Mike and partner shines. On the contrary, there are several complete bottoms, some of them so ridiculous that you can truly identify with them :-). I read that book every year.
- "How to Read Your Opponents' Cards".
"Partnership bidding" by Robson and Segal, good description of partnership style and -philosophy. While some of the specific bidding agreements don't suit me, it covers a lot of topics that need to be discussed in an ambitious partnership.
And there's Mollo. Suddenly I'm seing hogs, rabbits and toucans all over the club.
#12
Posted 2009-November-21, 01:34
#13
Posted 2009-November-21, 01:40
This month's Bridge World has a glowing review of "Expert Bridge Simplified", which Fred praised above. I'm planning on picking this up next week in San Diego.
#14
Posted 2009-November-21, 01:43
barmar, on Nov 21 2009, 02:40 AM, said:
This month's Bridge World has a glowing review of "Expert Bridge Simplified", which Fred praised above. I'm planning on picking this up next week in San Diego.
I read this book a few months ago.
I did not post a review. I did not think my review as a nonexpert would be helpful to true experts. All I can say is I did spend money and I did spend weeks and weeks reading this book.
I think true experts may have something to say about this book.
My fav. bridge book remains Lawrence "How to read the opp cards"
Funny enough it seems harder today than.....20-30 years ago.
#15
Posted 2009-November-21, 01:44
Bridge with the Blue Team
Books by Reese, David Bird and Victor Mollo.
#16
Posted 2009-November-21, 01:48
The_Hog, on Nov 21 2009, 02:44 AM, said:
Bridge with the Blue Team
Books by Reese, (edit) and Victor Mollo.
I am not an expert but can highly, highly recommend these books by the HOG>
#17
Posted 2009-November-21, 07:27
Five weeks to Winning Bridge
Adventures in Card Play
Dormer on deduction
Matchpoints
Picture Bidding
Books by people with the last name Brock
Master Play
Partnership Bidding
I also really liked reading some very old books, like some Culbertson and Elwell and the like.
-P.J. Painter.
#18
Posted 2009-November-21, 11:29
This is because the title says it all, so there was no need to go to all that trouble of actually reading it
"Bid Boldly, Play Safe"
......but then, I prefer Imps
Tony
#19
Posted 2009-November-21, 15:16
kenrexford, on Nov 21 2009, 08:27 AM, said:
Five weeks to Winning Bridge
heh that was the first book I ever read.
#20
Posted 2009-November-21, 19:37
Jlall, on Nov 21 2009, 04:16 PM, said:
kenrexford, on Nov 21 2009, 08:27 AM, said:
Five weeks to Winning Bridge
heh that was the first book I ever read.
First book or first bridge book?