Confessions of a Poker Dealer

A Short History of Poker Played in Casino's Since the Late 1970's

by Mark Ira Friedberg


Formats

Softcover
$14.95
Softcover
$14.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 12/7/2007

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 48
ISBN : 9781434353962

About the Book

      "Confessions of a Poker Dealer" is a short history of Poker played in Casino's since the late 1970's. It covers from the late 1970's when "Snatch" games ( the way casino's robbed poker players ) were eliminated to the growth of poker throughout the  1980's and 1990's and finally to the "Television" generation starting in 2002 and creating millions of new poker players. The book looks at what is still today the biggest win in gambling history, $18.5M including $10M in poker play between a "degenerate" craps player who borrowed $30. to start his improbable triumph and beat four of the biggest names in poker one at a time in the early 1990's. It's also about Robert Varkonyi, winner of the 2002 main event at the World Series of Poker and the most influential player in the history of the game. And there are other fun stories about poker and gambling in general from 27 years in Las Vegas and Atlantic City.


About the Author

      I was born in Trenton, New Jersey in 1952 and graduated high school in 1969. I attended college for two years without earning a degree. In 1975, I wrote a motion picture titled "Bookies" about three men involved with illegal gambling. Unable to sell it in New York, I moved out west to first, Arizona and six months later, Southern California. Unable to find interest from any studio or producer, I moved to Northern California. While there, I took a trip to Lake Tahoe and played poker in a Casino for the first time. I decided to move to Las Vegas in 1981 and get a job in a poker room. I worked on poker there until 1995 and the card rooms were The "old" Mint, The Freemont, The Riviera, The Union Plaza and Binion"s Horseshoe. Moving to Atlantic City in late 1995, I played poker for 12 years and working two years at the Tropicana.

      With the "explosion" of poker on the television creating millions of new players, I decided to write this book. Being a prolific reader of history and politics and with more than 25 years involved in poker rooms and the fact that no book ive seen has been written on this subject, it was fun doing this.