| Cowboys Full: The Story of Poker |  | Author: James McManus Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux Category: Book
List Price: $30.00 Buy New: $10.97 as of 9/4/2010 14:13 CDT details You Save: $19.03 (63%)
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Seller: bordeebook Rating: 31 reviews Sales Rank: 52,513
Format: Bargain Price Media: Hardcover Edition: First Edition Pages: 528 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.7
Dewey Decimal Number: 795.412 ASIN: B003RCJP8G
Publication Date: October 27, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Review Amazon Best Books of the Month, November 2009: Professional sports such as football and baseball may tout themselves as "America's Game," but according to James McManus, poker is the true American pastime. Cowboys Full is McManus's brilliant homage to the game that inspired his 2003 bestseller, Positively Fifth Street, and weaves through a colorful history of sharps, grinders, and braying donkeys. From the lawless saloons of the Old West to Oval Offices of the modern era, poker has been a part of our cultural DNA for nearly two centuries by offering a shot at the American Dream with each deal. "More than politics, warfare, business, or physical sports," McManus argues, "poker has become the arena in which men and women of every race and background compete on the most equal footing." Although positioning it alongside Mom and apple pie may be a stretch, Cowboys Full nevertheless presents a compelling case that the essence of America is best understood through a few hands of its favorite card game. --Dave Callanan
Product Description
From James McManus, author of the bestselling Positively Fifth Street, comes the definitive story of the game that, more than any other, reflects who we are and how we operate. Cowboys Full is the story of poker, from its roots in China, the Middle East, and Europe to its ascent as a globalbut especially an Americanphenomenon. It describes how early Americans took a French parlor game and, with a few extra cards and an entrepreneurial spirit, turned it into a national craze by the time of the Civil War. From the kitchen-table games of ordinary citizens to its influence on generals and diplomats, poker has gone hand in hand with our national experience. Presidents from Abraham Lincoln to Barack Obama have deployed poker and its strategies to explain policy, to relax with friends, to negotiate treaties and crises, and as a political networking tool. The ways we all do battle and business are echoed by poker tactics: cheating and thwarting cheaters, leveraging uncertainty, bluffing and sussing out bluffers, managing risk and reward. Cowboys Full shows how what was once accurately called the cheater’s game has become amostly honest contest of cunning, mathematical precision, and luck. It explains how poker, formerly dominated by cardsharps, is now the most popular card game in Europe, East Asia, Australia, South America, and cyberspace, as well as on television. It combines colorful history with firsthand experience from today’s professional tour. And it examines poker’s remarkable hold on American culture, from paintings by Frederic Remington to countless poker novels, movies, and plays. Braiding the thrill of individual hands with new ways of seeing poker’s relevance to our military, diplomatic, business, and personal affairs, Cowboys Full is sure to become the classic account of America’s favorite pastime.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 31
poker June 21, 2010 Diane C., Goelz (Paso Robles, Calif.) Well the first 1/2 of the book is great. The second half I could live without.
Good History of Poker May 14, 2010 D. White (Bossier City, LA) I enjoyed this book, but felt like the end did not really go with the rest of the story. The first four fifths of the book does a good job of explaining how poker came into being and how it spread across the country and eventually the world. After discussing the WSOP, the rest of the book examines where poker is going, some legal issues it faces, and how academics are using and studying poker. This section of the book felt more like an appendix. If you have a interest in the history of poker, I would recommend this book. If you are looking for a good poker story pick up McManus' Positively Fifth Street instead.
Politics not Poker April 10, 2010 Henry Bemis (The Twighlight Zone) 3 out of 10 found this review helpful
Do yourself a favor and read the sample first. I got the hard copy as a gift and was appalled at the politics in the first chapter. This guy is just another Obama lover from Chicago.
The most definitive account of poker yet committed to paper April 4, 2010 B. Murray (Ireland) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Acclaimed novelist, poet, academic, and poker player James McManus is back with what is undoubtedly the most definitive account of poker and card playing yet committed to paper.
Cowboys Full - The Story of Poker is indeed the story of poker. It will be cherished by aficionados' and laymen alike and its exhaustive research and clear historical analysis will thrill scholars of the game for years to come.
The author of the much-loved Positively Fifth Street, a groundbreaking book about his own journey to fifth place at the World Series of Poker main event in 2000, has painstaking pulled together all the disparate threads of the game, from the development of playing cards through the codification of modern poker to the present day Internet boom in an eminently readable study on how poker has helped shape the world.
Indeed, early in the book McManus states his "...goal is to show how the story of poker helps to explain who we are."
Not unpredictably this accomplished writer, who has penned articles for the likes of The New York Times, The Economist, and The New Yorker, does so with an knowing eye to the colour, characters, and, of course, cowboys of the game.
Seamlessly blending fastidious historical research with analytical observation and a sophisticated sense of humour McManus manages to effortlessly contextualise poker through history with reference to religion, militarism, diplomacy, law, business, education, mathematics, economics, and technology.
If that somehow makes it sound like it might not be a page-turner, think again.
The cast of characters alone reads like a history of the last millennium writ small over the felt and includes Eisenhower, Nixon, Truman, Roosevelt, Johnson, Grant, Hoover, Clinton, Obama, Homer, Dante, Chaucer, Goethe, Moliere, Shakespeare, Mary Queen of Scots, Henry VIII, Joan of Arc, Cassanova, Einstein, Crockett, Holliday, Hickock, Churchill, Goebbels, Hitler, Binion, Ahmadinejad, Garbo, Garrett, and Gobachev.
And all of that before we get to the players who are the media darlings of today.
Taking as its starting point the notion first posited by the New York Times in 1875 that, "The national game is not base-ball but poker" the book begins its journey through the story of poker back with the invention of playing cards.
Anthropoligist Stuart Culin traced their development back to Korean divinatory arrows which were eventually miniaturised in the six century to strips of oiled silk - the first playing cards.
The invention of paper and portable money, and the growth of the silk route hastened their internationalisation and popularity.
A second boom occurred after dark ages in Europe in the 1300s as people began to live longer, knew more, and had leisure time to play.
In Rouen, France by the late 1400s suits had generally been settled upon in a way we recognise today: Hearts representing the church, diamonds the merchant class, spades the state, and clubs signifying farmers.
In 1564 Milanese physician and mathematician Griolamo Cardano Dr. Jerome Cardplayer as McManus playfully translates invented a way to combine probabilities, laying the groundwork not only for modern algebra, probability theory, and financial analysis but for the basic poker odds we all know and take for granted today.
The card game Primiera was simplified by the French into Poque (pronounced Pok-uh) and is now regarded as the most direct antecedent of the modern game.
By the early 1800s the French had taken control of New Orleans, Louisiana and in this cultural melting pot of English, Spanish, French, and new American the modern game of poker was born and spread like wildfire on the steamboat routes out of the Creole capital.
McManus astutely describes the Mississippi steamboats as the Internet poker rooms of their day.
From there things pick up a head of steam (literally) like a prototype information superhighway the wild west years where lawlessness and chicanery threatened to destroy the game through the wars of the late 19th and early 20th century which saw poker language and concepts permeate mainstream language.
Dancing like Spider in Goodfellas through the road gambling years to the dusty neon oasis of Las Vegas, Benny Binion's visionary development of the World Series of Poker, and the "perfect storm" of the year poker went "boom" in 2003 the book fetches up at the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act, the online poker cheating scandals, and ultimately the mainstream globalisation of the game.
Cowboys Full The Story of Poker delights and informs in equal measure and it will surely be a long time before we see such a comprehensive book on card playing and players.
Save your money February 28, 2010 Jeffrey J. Bakke (Ellison Bay, WI) 3 out of 9 found this review helpful
While the author makes a fair attempt to write about the game, the reader is subjected to his political agenda.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 31
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