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Paperback Get the Edge at Blackjack Book

ISBN: 1566251516

ISBN13: 9781566251518

Get the Edge at Blackjack

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

How to beat card readers; How to take advantage of dealer errors; How to beat the shuffle machines; How to beat the preferential shuffle; Optimal betting for advantage methods; The progressive betting... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

The best book on the practicalities of winning blackjack

This is an extremely good book. The bottom line: you will make more cold, hard cash from this book than any other blackjack book on the market. It tells you all you need to know, no more and no less. As someone without a math background I appreciated the lack of theoretical waffle. May obviously understands all that stuff but has a refreshing tendency to speak to his readers in clear, plain English.Rather than just summarizing the text I though it would be more interesting if I just listed how much money I made from some of the techniques involved:Ace Location: $3,500 to dateCard Steering: $7,000Shadow Play: $1,250 CSM "Latency": $500Note too impressive perhaps until I point out that I only started with a few hundred dollars. Yes, these methods are that strong.This book bears continual re-reading, so much to digest. Some passages, such as the section on getting kickbacks on your own blackjack play from internet affiliate programs can be missed on first reading but can be very effective (I made $5000+ out of that idea alone!).Bad points: I detected some minor errors in the tables early in the book, and some of the internet section is outdated now (things move so fast online). Annoyingly, May publishes tags for the "Lima" card counting system but doesn't actually recommend it stating that is just isn't powerful enough whereas I think it might be interesting for use at pitch games. The book is also extremely well written, perhaps due to the influence of Scoblete's editing, though May exhibits none of Scoblete's obsession with quasi-scientific methods.

I Liked Everything About This Book even the Foreword!

I agree with just about everything Mr. Parker says in his review, except the stuff about the Foreword by Frank Scoblete. When I finished this book I was completely in agreement with the opinion that this is a blackjack nuclear bomb. May's easy style and his ability to describe difficult concepts in ways that an average reader could comprehend makes this one of the few BJ books dealing in advanced concepts that is actually accessible to a person such as myself. I have been counting cards for years and now I think I can add a few new tools to my casino-beating toolbox thanks to John May.

Not for everyone

The biggest problem with John May's "Get the Edge at Blackjack," is the introduction by Frank Scoblete. "The book you are holding is a blackjack nuclear bomb," is how it starts, and the hype increases from there. One is left with the impression that by merely applying a few of the techniques in the book, the casinos will become veritable ATM machines. Naturally this is not the case, and the reader is left feeling vaguely let down. Which is a shame, because there is much to like here. There are indeed techniques that have heretofore received little or no publicity, and much that is of use to the serious blackjack player. Another nitpick: Scoblete's intro further states, "There is information in [the book] that has never appeared in print in a mainstream book and there is some information that has never appeared anywhere except in the secret world inhabited by a handful of elite professional blackjack players." Well, I'm flattered. While none of the material may have ever appeared in a paper and ink book before, blackjack aficionados who have visited the Green Baize Vampire (May's alter ego) website and/or May's Card Counter Cafe may find that much of it has a familiar ring. This is not inherently a bad thing - after all, much of Don Schlesinger's "Blackjack Attack" was previously published in issues of Arnold Snyder's "Blackjack Forum" magazine. Still, I certainly have never considered myself an "elite professional blackjack player."Oddly, (considering that this is supposed to be a collection of advanced techniques) the book starts with a brief summary of the rules of blackjack, followed by a recap of basic strategy. Next is an introduction to card counting, including a brief description of the Hi-Lo count. Then we have a system comparison chart that is sure to spark some controversy. It shows both the Knockout count and Arnold Snyder's Red 7 count as being marginally superior to the time-honored Hi-Lo in all three areas: betting correlation, playing efficiency, and insurance correlation. To further complicate things, May provides no information as to how he arrived at these figures (what game, rules, etc.). The first section of the book is concluded with a brief discussion of multi-parameter counts, and May's thoughts on cover and camouflage. I like this quote: "While the expert card counter plays blackjack against the dealer, he plays poker against the pit; that is, his play is geared toward the intelligence of the pit personnel." Indeed.By this point the veteran player is likely chomping at the bit: "When do we get to the good stuff?" Part II carries the enticing title: "Advantage-Play Techniques - How to Become a Casino's Worst Nightmare!" What follows is indeed "good stuff." Card Steering, Card Sequencing, and Shadow Play are described in detail. How much to bet when your first card is known (as a result of these techniques) is discussed. This has already caused some controversy on blackjack websites, as May recommends betting 40% of one'

Really Worth Buying

John May is an elite blackjack player and this book gives you information that I have not read anywhere else. While it does discuss and explain the theory of card counting, the revolutionary stuff that is advertised on the cover concerns methods of play such as glim, stacker, ace tracking and the like. Some of these are "do-able" by mere mortals like myself and some seem extremely hard to pull off. I think the book is very well written and organized and May's writing flows. He explains very difficult concepts in a way that is understandable. I believe this is one of the top books ever written on blackjack and is definitely worth buying.

This is a one of a kind book

Very few blackjack books can live up to their hype. This book has been heavily promoted by Frank Scoblete who is a very popular gaming writer. I bought it because I tend to buy everything about blackjack in the hope, rare, that I will learn something new from it. Most times the blackjack book doesn't really offer me anything to write home about...or even write a review about. But I must say that not only does Mr. John May's book live up to the hype, it surpasses it. I learned several new and devastating advantage-play techniques that are just wonderful. I would recommend you get this book fast before the casinos discover what Mr. May is writing about and start watching the games even more closely than they currently do. This book will have a strong appeal to experienced blackjack players and they will learn new techniques from it just as I have. I put this on a par with the two or three best blackjack books ever written!
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