Players: Con Men, Hustlers, Gamblers, and Scam Artists

Players: Con Men, Hustlers, Gamblers, and Scam Artists
ISBN-10
1560253800
ISBN-13
9781560253808
Series
Players
Category
True Crime
Pages
352
Language
English
Published
2002-12-31
Publisher
Running Press Adult
Authors
Stephen Hyde, Geno Zanetti

Description

Once I hear the clatter of chips I almost go into convulsions," said Dostoyevsky, while Anatole France wrote, "The gambler is driven by the fascination of danger at the bottom of all great passions." The characters the reader meets in Players—chess grand masters, poolroom hustlers, or street-hardened practitioners of the short con—are all alike propelled by the ecstasy of risk. "The stake is money," France wrote, "in other words, immediate, infinite possibilities." In fact, as the reader hooks up with David Mamet in the poker room and meets Damon Runyon's Bookie Bob, Saul Bellow's immortal Yellow Kid, and learns from Herbert Asbury about the antics of Izzy and Moe, and from David Maurer about the discreet charm of the confidence man, Walter Tevis on Fast Eddie Felson and Minnesota Fats on the seductions of nineteenth-century gambling dens, high lives and low will merge and the world of gambler and con-artist will blur. Selected writings by Jorge Luis Borges, Hunter S. Thompson, Nick Tosches, and many others are featured.

Other editions

Similar books

  • Players: The Story of Sports and Money, and the Visionaries Who Fought to Create a Revolution
    By Matthew Futterman

    Traces the single-generation transformation of sports from a cottage industry to a global business, reflecting on how elite athletes, agents, TV executives, coaches, owners, and athletes who once had to take second jobs worked together to ...

  • The 50 Greatest Players in St. Louis Cardinals History
    By Robert W. Cohen

    Features of The 50 Greatest Players in St. Louis Cardinals History include: Each player’s notable achievements Recaps of the player’s most memorable performances Summaries of each player’s best season Quotes from opposing players and ...

  • Money Players: Days and Nights Inside the New NBA
    By Armen Keteyian

    Criticizes modern professional basketball, arguing it is threatened by scandals, and suggests top players have been corrupted by their huge salaries

  • The 50 Greatest Players in San Francisco 49ers History
    By Robert W. Cohen

    Joe Montana? Steve Young? Robert Cohen, has his own take on the matter and in a book that is bound to inspire conversation if not controversy, ranks who he believes are the greatest players from 1-50, with 25 honorable mentions.

  • Team Players and Teamwork: New Strategies for Developing Successful Collaboration
    By Glenn M. Parker

    Praise for Team Players and Teamwork "In the new edition of Team Players and Teamwork Glenn Parker updates his landmark compendium on the essential effect of cross-functional teamwork to encompass the added complexities of globalization ...

  • Players and Pretenders: The Basketball Team That Couldn't Shoot Straight

    Players and Pretenders tells the story of the flip side of basketball?s ?March Madness,? where the game is played by average players for love, not for money.

  • The Players: Poems
    By Jill Bialosky

    The strongest collection yet from this widely praised poet is about the central players in our lives, our relationships over time--between mother and son, mother and daughter--and how one generation of relationships informs and shapes the ...

  • The End of Baseball as We Knew it: The Players Union, 1960-81
    By Charles P. Korr

    ... all the gains made by the union . In any case , the perceptions of the players shaped the reality of the negotiations . ... It was not even a union of all professional baseball players . ... 1980 - THE STRIKE THAT DIDN'T HAPPEN 201.

  • Players
    By Clay Reynolds

    With an all-new introduction to the Baen Ebook Edition. Clay Reynolds is the winner of the Western Writers of America Spur Award. "Ingenious . . .

  • Who K'new!: The Players Have Changed, but the Game Remains the Same
    By Kimberly L. Morgan-Dade

    Everyone knew that freshman had their hall, sophomores had theirs, juniors had theirs, and seniors had theirs. But of course he walked down our hall to see where my locker was, and stood there and talked to me before he walked to his ...