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- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!cs.utexas.edu!news-is-not-mail
- From: varvel@cs.utexas.edu (Donald A. Varvel)
- Newsgroups: rec.games.bridge
- Subject: Re: Reading List?
- Date: 3 Jan 1993 20:34:31 -0600
- Organization: CS Dept, University of Texas at Austin
- Lines: 32
- Message-ID: <1i87nnINNpv@im4u.cs.utexas.edu>
- References: <1993Jan3.193903.1604@netcom.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: im4u.cs.utexas.edu
- Keywords: books
-
- In article <1993Jan3.193903.1604@netcom.com> ditt@netcom.com (Debora Dittmar) writes:
- >What books would rgbers recommend for a bridge novice to read? I want to stick
- >to Standard American bidding for the present. I've already got Root's
- >Commonsense Bidding, Root and Pavlicek's Modern Bridge Conventions
- >and Kantar's Bridge Conventions.
-
- >Something on actually playing the hand comes to mind, but what's good? Also,
- >what books would be useful on the strategies that duplicate requires?
-
- 1. I'm not familiar with Kantar's book. Bear in mind that the treatments
- recommended by Root and Pavlicek are in many cases *far* from being
- standard. Not bad. Just not recommended anywhere but in that book.
- Things that come to mind are new suits not forcing over weak 2's and
- the treatment of 4th suit forcing.
- 2. I'm not a great admirer of Standard American. I wish somebody would
- do an update of Kaplan-Sheinwold. The first book on bidding I ever
- read that made sense was the 1963 K-S book. American bidding methods
- have fragmented to the point that there is no good book on bidding
- that I know of. Acol types have it better. Lawrence has written
- a number of good books on specific areas of bidding.
- 3. In answer to the direct question:
- a. Watson's Classic Book on the Play of the Hand at Bridge is pretty
- standard. The first part teaches elementary play. I first read
- it after I had started playing duplicate and found it useful. The
- second part is more advanced. It's still interesting reading after
- over 60 years in print.
- b. It's hardly a beginner's text, but Kantar's Defensive Bridge Play
- Complete, "the big red book," is required reading for intermediate
- players. There are books by Kantar and Kelsey on defense that are
- good after you've gotten through the big red book a time or two.
-
- -- Don Varvel (varvel@cs.utexas.edu)
-