Synopses & Reviews
In the mid-1970s, Ian Andersen wrote
Turning the Tables on Las Vegas, the classic book on casino comportment. As the first book to broach the all-important consideration of how to get away with getting the money,
Turning was the book that launched a thousand blackjack careers. After its publication, however, Andersen disappeared from the scene. Where did he go? The answer is spelled out in this long-awaited sequel,
Burning the Tables in Las Vegasand#151;Keys to Success in Blackjack and in Life.
Since 1976, Andersen has been perfecting his personal program for success in blackjack, poker, and other of lifeand#8217;s games. His technique I combines elements of mathematics, psychology, and mental and physical well-being to create a never-before disclosed approach to winning.
Burning the Tables in Las Vegas addresses virtually every aspect of blackjack advantage play: game selection, longevity, tipping, employee relations, guises, disguises, false identification, credit, comps, risk, heat, dress, demeanor, and diet. Andersen also explains how emotions, such as guilt and anger, and skills, such as discipline and interpersonal competence, can affect your prospects for profit.
Peppered with fascinating anecdotes and stories from Andersenand#8217;s forays into the great casinos of the world, Burning the Tables in Las Vegas takes you on a vicarious journey into rarefied realm of the high-stakes blackjack proand#151;and show you what it takes to be one.
Synopsis
Ian Andersen's first book, Turning the Tables on Las Vegas (Vanguard Press), is considered the classic book on casino comportment, or in layman's terms -- beating the casinos and getting away with it. Unlike the early mathematics-based blackjack tomes, Turning concentrated on the psychological aspects of winning, and eventually sold more than 250,000 copies.
Soon thereafter, Andersen returned to the casino trenches, where he spent the next 20-plus years, anonymously perfecting his personal program for success in blackjack and poker, as well as life's greater games. In his long-awaited sequel, Burning the Tables in Las Vegas, Andersen describes, in-depth, his carefully cultivated techniques for winning at blackjack, health, and happiness.
Synopsis
In 1975, Ian Andersen left the mundane world of corporate America to play high-stakes blackjack. He described his conquests in the classing Turning the Tables on Las Vegas (Vanguard Press). Now, after 25 more years in the casino trenches, Andersen has written his long-awaited sequel, which describes his personal program for success in blackjack and poker. The new edition of Andersen's classic book on casino comportment is revised, updated, and contains three new chapters directed primarily at the market's largest sector ???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? the mid-level gambler.
About the Author
Ian Andersen has been a world-class professional gambler and an international man of mystery since the late 1960s, when he began collecting material for his ground-breaking book about the psychology of advantage play,
Turning the Tables on Las Vegas. After 35 years, heand#8217;s still out there, plying his unique gambling trade, wherever he likes.