For Beginners I rate it A+.
For Intermediate Ill give it a B+.
This is an outstanding beginner book. In fact its got several sections that intermediate players would gain from reading. Nothing in the book is super complex, so don't think you cant do some of what she discusses. What I especially like is the author seems to focus on problems that declarers frequently get wrong. Rather than a theoretical book on card play, like Play of the Hand, this is a practical, applied book.
1) The section on computing percentages at the table is well done. Its easy to read and she makes some observations I'd never have thought about.
Example: trumps are pulled, both hands have one. In a side suit Clubs you hold:
Dummy: KJxxx
Declarer: Ax
You also have finesse available, in another suit. With one other entry to dummy.
What do you do?
Play A, then small to the J, right?
No. Play A (see if the Q drops), then Play the K.
If the Q doesnt drop, you have 2 options -
a) Take the finesse
![:)](http://www.bridgebase.com/forums/public/style_emoticons/default/cool.gif)
What should you do now? 4-2 is 48.5%, 3-3 is 35.5%.
The point is that percentages change as distributions are eliminated. Not only are the 6-0 and 5-1 layouts gone, so are all the 4-2s where Q is a doubleton. 1/3 of the 4-2 distributions involve Qx, so the 4-2 percentage drops by 1/3, to 32%.
Since 35.5% > 32% its better to play for the 3-3 split, and ruff, and forgo the finesse. This isnt rocket science, and with a bit of practice players can become more aware of things like this.
2) There is a nice section on simple Squeezes in 3NT contracts. Some of the squeezes at the end you may not use, but the simple squeeze is easy to use if you just look to see if the conditions are right.
3) The section on Inferences and placing the opponents cards is nicely done. A few simple points to keep in mind, to help you decide who has what.
4) There is also a section on deception, with some basic fundamentals. Well worth reading.
5) Lastly, she has 41 problems at the end. Most are not very hard; they don't involve some crazy squeeze. She warns that during the heat of play its likely most people would get almost everyone wrong. I some easy, some took me several minutes to think about before getting, and I also missed some. While these are not as hard as Bridge Master problems, they are very common situations you will likely see repeatedly at the table.
I came across it because it was recommended on Karen Walkers Bridge book list
(http://www.prairienet.org/bridge/)