I have begun rereading books I read.
While How to Read Your Opponents CArds is excellent, Mike Lawrence has another less well known book -
How to Play Card Combinations.
It covers a number of common situations like KJx in Dummy, or Ax opposite Qx.
Its similar to HTRYOC in that you have to use the opps bidding and play to place the cards to make your decision.
I consider it a sequel to HTRYOC.
I thought
I Fought the Law by Mike Lawrence and Anders Wirgren was certainly worth reading. They spent a bit too much time up front showing how the LAW doesn't work that well at high levens in a number of situations. Their suggested method is generally easy to use and seems to work well.
I recently read 2 books by Jim Priebe.
- Thinking on Defense
- Matchpoint Defense
I had high expectations for Thinking on Defense, but was disappointed.
The premise is excellent - generate a few hands declarer might have and see if they fit in with the bidding and play. Also, don't just make the "obvious" book defensive play. Think deeper about whats going on. Can that play REALLY work, given what you know about the hands?
While some hands were quite good, and most were not easy, I found that the inferences the author drew from the bididng didn't always make sense.
I would love to read a good advanced book on defense. Too bad this wasn't that good. Cou;d have been a lot better.
I give it a C.
[I don't rate a book 'bad' if its not at my level, or it was too hard. I rate it bad because its not all that good
]
I liked Matchpoint Defense much more. Some good problems and points. There is a quiz of 50 problems at the end. The problem is the later half have bididng that is either bad, or not what you would expect. The author says you have to expect bad bidding and deal with it. I guess thats true, but it makes it hard to defend.
For example, there is a hand from 1971 where the opps open 2 Spades
It turns out to be a 7 card suit A J 9 x x x x
Not what you would expect today for a 2 spades bid.
On another hand, declarer makes a strong jump bid and turnsof with 15 HCP. It was a crappy bid, and teh author says you have to expect that.
I think of Eddie Kantars quip (from his excellent Modern and Advanced Bridge Defens ebooks)
Its hard to defend against a madman, becaus etheir bidding will throw you off. But they will ultimately give it back by ending up in more bad contracts.
Decent Book, I give it a B- or B
Eddie Kantars
"Kantar for the Defense" is a great Intermediate level book.
100 problems, wioth card by card play and questiosn. You are not told what the key play is, but at some point you are asked the critical questions. The problems are not very hard (though I missed a number) and test your signaling and signal reading. 2-3 key points are summarized after each hand.
For intermediates its an A.