Rating:  Summary: Entertaining but questionable Review: This is a well-written, entertaining book in which the author claims a good blackjack player can easily make more money than most professionals, and do so in elegant casino surroundings. The suggestion to play in the company of an attractive woman, so as to avoid being tagged as a card counter, makes it seem even more fun. Who wants to work for a living when he can make good money playing BJ with a beautiful dame hanging on one's arm? "If it sounds too good to be true ...". You fill in the rest.
How well did Revere actually do? He gives a record of his play during a period when he hopped from one casino to another, playing only a few minutes in each one to avoid detection as a counter. If this is an honest record, it would seem to support Revere's claims that he beat the game, although he does not mention certain factors such as penetration which would affect his results.
In any event, this could be a good introduction to the game, along with Thorpe's Beat the Dealer, provided one takes it with a grain of salt. Just remember that casinos now have software which they use to keep track of players and detect counting methods.
Rating:  Summary: THE Best Basic Strategy Book! Review: Although Revere's counts aren't as good as some others out there today, this book was the authority on blackjack when it was published. And you know what? It still pretty much is. This is a great book for beginners. The numbers were done by Julian Braun of IBM so the basic strategy is second to none. This book is a must for any player, beginner or advanced!
Rating:  Summary: Bar far the best basic strategy BJ book on the market Review: As a Las Vegas pit boss for over 25 years, I can tell you Lawrence Revere's book "Playing Blackjack As A Business" is simply the best ever written. I had the privilege of asking Mr. Revere to leave our casino on two occasions. Not only was he the best, but he was a master of disquise. His book was and still is the "Bible" of blackjack couting, basic straegy and money management. Today, there are many "wan-a-be" card counters but only a select few can test pit bosses like myself. They usually give themselves away by being too greedy and tripling their wagers on a plus 10 deck or spreading their wagers to two or three spots. Or, they might take insurance with a stiff hand, surrender always correctly or double that A-7. We simply tell the dealer to shuffle up or cut the shoe in half and even the most moronic card counters get the hint and leave. But, Lawrence Revere was a 21 legend and wrote a book that was simple enough for anyone to understand. I highly recommend it to anyone who takes the game of blackjack seriously. Just using his basic strategy and money management tips will improve your game immediately.
Rating:  Summary: Bar far the best basic strategy BJ book on the market Review: As a Las Vegas pit boss for over 25 years, I can tell you Lawrence Revere's book "Playing Blackjack As A Business" is simply the best ever written. I had the privilege of asking Mr. Revere to leave our casino on two occasions. Not only was he the best, but he was a master of disquise. His book was and still is the "Bible" of blackjack couting, basic straegy and money management. Today, there are many "wan-a-be" card counters but only a select few can test pit bosses like myself. They usually give themselves away by being too greedy and tripling their wagers on a plus 10 deck or spreading their wagers to two or three spots. Or, they might take insurance with a stiff hand, surrender always correctly or double that A-7. We simply tell the dealer to shuffle up or cut the shoe in half and even the most moronic card counters get the hint and leave. But, Lawrence Revere was a 21 legend and wrote a book that was simple enough for anyone to understand. I highly recommend it to anyone who takes the game of blackjack seriously. Just using his basic strategy and money management tips will improve your game immediately.
Rating:  Summary: A pioneer of "counting" is still one of the best...R.I.P. Review: Even Mr. Revere acknowledged the fact that no one will win everytime, but this book will help you trim down your losses and capitalize on your good sessions. If a majority of the players just used the basic strategy as outlined in this book it would most likely cause the casinos to change there rules.
Rating:  Summary: One Of The Best Books Available For Learning Basic Strategy Review: I first read this book in 1975 in my quest to become an accomplished card counter. At that time and even today it is the best book I read on learning the fundamentals of card counting. The part of the book on learning Basic Strategy and its importance are the best of any book available on the marketplace even today in 2001. At that time the author Lawrence Revere was selling his Advanced Point Count System and other BJ systems. He overrated his Advanced Point Count System. He had used Juliet Braun a computer programmer with IBM to compile all the data in devising this system. What he says about the Advanced Point Count System is way overrated and the majority of top expert BJ authorities believe the simple point count system as being the best because of its simplicity. Other than that the book is a classic and very well written. It is a must for anyone who wants to learn to be an expert card counter and I would rate it as a five star recommendation.
Rating:  Summary: Love The Spring Review: I love the spring and this book is awsome I won like 400 dollars in like 15 minutes man.
Rating:  Summary: Book holds solid advice that still rings true... Review: I purchased & read this book a few years back, it reminds me of the book by ken uston (which was the 1st book on 21 i read). even though it may seem dated to read it now - it's solid advice. i took his advice while in vegas 3 yrs. ago, dated or not it still holds true! i first learned basic strategy when i was 21, and i go to the casinos in lousiana just to practice my counting skills (i can count up to 6 decks accurately w/ up to 6-7 players at the table). no one is going to learn this overnight, but you can do so - my only question to anyone reading this is: how bad do you want to?
Rating:  Summary: Sorry - this book is of historical interest only Review: I was introduced to this book in 1972 whilst applying for a casino job in Tehran, of all places, and a few years later when I began playing serious BJ myself, I would have given it 4 stars but with some reluctance because, aside from the good parts, it also contains a lot of gamblers superstition and questionable advice.
Revere's book was a breakthrough in that it was written for the player who wanted a clear and concise book on "how to win" rather than Thorpe ("Beat the Dealer")desire to demonstate how terribly clever he was. Unlike say Allan Wilsons "Casino Gamblers Guide" (see my review) the text is poorly written but, most importantly and memorably it did have excellent colour-coded strategy charts - it was this feature more than anything else which I believe made the book such a success. On the debit side I would agree with the 2-star reviewer below that LR's agenda was to sell his much-touted "superior strategies", the mastery of which according to him, would double or triple your win-rate. I fell for this sales pitch and sent him another $200 (a lot of money at the time) - plus an extra $50 for the "no-hole card strategy", which consisted of a scrap of typed paper containing half a dozen numbers and no explanatory notes. His so-called "advanced point-count" was highly over-rated and his promised "after-sales service" non-existent. Besides, I soon discovered that going from a simple one-level count to an "advanced" multi-level count produces marginal gain at best, esp in multi-deck games. After expressing my dissatisfaction by letter, LR wrote a curt one-line reply on a businesscard..! Such was his brusque manner. Most of LR's strategies and experience refer to the now rare single-deck game - sure you can still find them but if you bet more than a quarter and appear to know what you are doing you will certainly get "heat" and probably have the deck broken on you. He appeared to have very little if any experience of even 4-deck games let alone the now much more common 6 or more decks. His very conservative bet-spread was also based on a single deck game and would have been useless applied to 4 or more decks, but this fact was glossed over. In Revere's day (the 60's and early '70's), the game was far easier to beat - more and better decision options, much deeper penetration, and much less scrutiny ("heat") for counters than is the case today. In this respect the 5-star review below by the "Las Vegas pit boss of 25 years" is inexplicable and totally unrealistic. LR also virtually ignored the fact (as do most other BJ books written for the US market) that in most of the world the dealer doesn't take a hole card - this apparently "minor" rule change makes a big difference to the basic strategy when playing against a dealers 10 or Ace. I don't doubt that Revere was quite successful at the tables, but nowhere near as much as he makes out. In his day single-deck BJ was (relatively-speaking) easy to beat, there were very few counters, and dealers and pit-bosses weren't as paranoid about counters as they were to become, largely as a result of this book. I would wager that LR made much more money selling his books and strategies than he ever did from playing. I don't know whether Revere's heirs (he died in the late '70's) are still selling their expensive "advanced strategies" but if they are - send me your money instead - I'll give you far better value and advice. Unless newer editions of his book have corrected these deficiencies, then this book is all but useless for the modern "tough" multi-deck casino environment.
Rating:  Summary: This is THE BEST beginners book. Review: I've used this book for years as a reference before going anywhere I play Blackjack. Mr. Revere provided color coded, easily understood charts and tables for single and mulitple deck games. He gives basic strategy for each as well as several simple to advanced counting strategies. His rules regarding bet size, betting and playing time are rules to survival at the tables. I may not be getting kicked out of casinos, but I leave with their money 4 out of 5 times and the losses are pocket change compared to the winnings. Mr. Revere has since died, but his knowledge of blackjack is as true today as it was over 20 years ago.
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