What books in what order?
#1
Posted 2014-May-10, 11:19
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#2
Posted 2014-May-10, 14:18
I think that the computerized learning environment is better than reading.
Follow these up with
The Rodwell Files
Defensive Card Play Complete by Kantar and
Bridge Squeeze Complete by Love
and I think your in pretty good shape
On the bidding front
1. How to Build a Bidding System by Roy Hughes
2. The Useful Space Principal by Jeff Rubens
3. Precision in the 90s by Barry Rigal (ignore the section on symmetric relay)
4. Washington Standard by Steve Robinson
5. Polish Club by Matula
#3
Posted 2014-May-10, 17:20
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#4
Posted 2014-May-14, 12:47
blackshoe, on 2014-May-10, 17:20, said:
Hm. Can't find the Kantar under that title. There is Defensive Bridge Play Complete, published in 1974. Is that the one you meant? I do have his two volume Modern Bridge Defense and Advanced Bridge Defense, which seem to me to be pretty good.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#5
Posted 2014-May-14, 12:59
-P.J. Painter.
#6
Posted 2014-May-14, 12:59
blackshoe, on 2014-May-14, 12:47, said:
Sorry, it was defensive bridge play (honking big red book)
#7
Posted 2014-May-14, 15:20
hrothgar, on 2014-May-14, 12:59, said:
Yeah, from the picture on Amazon that'll be the one. I'll see if I can pick up a copy.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#8
Posted 2014-May-14, 21:27
A few commonly overlooked declarer play titles:
For beginners, Audrey Grant/Eric Rodwell's "Bridge Maxims" - more detail than the Diamond Series books, very readable, something I come back to when I need practice hands for a beginner class
For intermediates, Fred Karpin's "The Drawing of Trumps and Its Postponement" - a look at each of the reasons why we pull or don't pull trumps, so in effect, a look at each of the ways we might plan the hand as declarer.
For people moving on toward advanced, Kelsey's "Countdown to Better Bridge." All about counting out suits and points and whatnot. Much better than the later Tim Bourke book that re-used the title. (All three of the above are out of print. And I loaned my copy of the Kelsey out and never got it back. Drat.)
If you want a complete sequences of progressively harder declarer play books, I would include those in spots 1, 3, and 4, with Watson, Bird's Endplays for Everyone (not because I love it, I don't, but because there arent many other choices), Love, and Rubens's Expert Bridge Simplified in spots 2, 5, 6, and 7.
For advanced defense books (for people who already know how to count but are lazy about it), Jim Priebe's "Thinking on Defense" and Davis Weiss's "Defense at Trick One". I don't really have a complete sequence to suggest for defense - Kantar is a good start but then there is a gap - basically learning how to visualize and count the unseen hands - before people are ready for the advanced books.
For bidding, the sequence I used to recommend to beginners was Commonsense Bidding, Modern Bridge Conventions, Modern Losing Trick Count, To Bid or Not to Bid, and then specific items as needed, depending what conventions people were learning or what aspects of the game most interested them. None of those 4 is perfect, either, but nothing that I liked spectacularly well has come along since.
Best one-convention book: Andersen's Lebensohl book.
Best one-aspect-of-the-game book: Preempts from A to Z.
Best overall-advice books for int+ folks: Rubens's Secrets of Winning Bridge, Woolsey's Matchpoints.
If you have a complete novice, Danny Roth's "The Expert Beginner" and "The Expert Improver" are a decidedly nonstandard but intriging way to start.
#9
Posted 2014-May-15, 08:21
#11
Posted 2014-June-25, 13:05
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#12
Posted 2014-June-25, 14:04
One of my favorties is The Modern Losing Trick Count by Ron Klinger, 1987.
C3: Copious Canape Club is still my favorite system. (Ultra upgraded, PM for notes)
Santa Fe Precision ♣ published 8/19. TOP3 published 11/20. Magic experiment (Science Modernized) with Lenzo. 2020: Jan Eric Larsson's Cottontail ♣. 2020. BFUN (Bridge For the UNbalanced) 2021: Weiss Simplified ♣ (Canape & Relay). 2022: Canary ♣ Modernized, 2023-4: KOK Canape.
#13
Posted 2014-July-12, 08:03
If they feel they have mastered those, I have them read Lawrence's "Overcalls."
#14
Posted 2014-July-14, 10:27