Posts filed under 'Ebooks'
No Limits Holdem Secrets – Roy Rounders
Sorry for not updating the blog lately. Here’s a new ebook for y’all.

http://rapid*sha**re.*com/files/131*971187/*No_Limit_Hold_em_Se*crets__Roy_Roun*der_.pdf.html
Remove the ” * ” to download the ebook
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Add comment July 23, 2008
The Intellligent Guide to Texas Hold’em Poker
A concise and meticulously researched guide to Texas Hold’em Poker. Teaches the rules of Texas Hold’em, basic strategy, and how to play in a cardroom. More advanced players will benefit from statistical charts, vignettes from actual poker games, and detailed information on how the social and psychological aspects of the game determine strategy.
Readers also get a comprehensive analysis of online poker, including how to use your computer to play poker on the Internet, and concise profiles and addresses of 15 online cardrooms.
http://r*apid*s**ha*re.de/files/39993068/The_Intellligent_Guide.pdf.html
To Download, remove the ” *’s ” of the above url !
Add comment July 13, 2008
Internet Texas Hold’em Winning Strategies From An Internet Pro (Matthew Hilger)
As Internet poker exploded, thousands of players turned to Internet Texas Hold’em to help them become winning players. Today, Internet Texas Hold’em is now the most successfull book ever on Internet poker. Internet Texas Hold’em is an excellent tool for beginning to intermediate players to be successful at limit Texas Hold’em with specific topics focused on Internet play. The book’s reputation has superceded its title as many players now recommend it for live play also. A comprehensive overview of Texas Hold’em is presented including general poker concepts such as probability and odds, bluffing, raising and check-raising. Various deceptive tactics are also discussed such as free cards, slowplaying, and inducing bluffs and calls. You’ll learn the correct strategies for starting hand play as well as playing on the flop, turn, and river. You’ll learn the intricacies of playing on the Internet and the differences in strategies between Internet and live play. Finally, you’ll be able to practice all of these strategies on over 200 actual Internet hands. Poker is a fun game, but it is even more fun when you win. This is a book for players who want to improve their game to win more money. If you only play a few hours a week or strive to take your game to an advanced level, this book should serve as a reference for many years to come.
Download:
http://r4p1d5h4re.com/files/127694546/Texas_Hold_em_Strategies_From_An_Internet_Pro.pdf.html
Add comment July 6, 2008
The Education of a Poker Player
This classic is not only a poker playing manual but a marvellous autobiography. First published in 1957, Yardley, also the first chief of the US code breakers during W.W.1 and W.W.2, recalls countless poker games with characters ranging from railroad men, travelling salesmen, speculators, drunks, no-hopers, and even secret agents, all seen across the green baize tables of the world. Offering fascinating insight into Yardley’s cautious/tight play variety of poker as well as the world of code breaking, this book is in a league of its own.
Download: http://r4p1d5h4re.com/files/126892594/The_Education_Of_A_Poker_Player__Herbert_Osborne_Yardley_.pdf.html
Add comment July 3, 2008
Poker: A Guaranteed Income for Life by Using the Advanced Concepts

Many years ago, this book had a major impact on me as a poker player. While certainly not a “how to” book like (as in what do you do when dealt a pair of Aces) it revealed to me for the first time how much of a skill game poker is. Its written around story lines about a fictional character who is pretty ruthless. Critics who call the book “How to hustle your friends” aren’t completely wrong. But it offers much more than that. It offers so many unique insights into the game of poker that you will never get from other traditional books that I must recommended it. The section on tracking your earnings and losses was worth the price of the book.
Download: http://r4p1d5h4re.com/files/126617609/Advanced_Concepts_of_Poker.pdf.html
Add comment July 2, 2008
Winning Secrets Of Online Poker (2005)
Get ready to develop and refine your online poker skills with these winning secrets! Effectively use the various tools at your disposal to examine your play and gain valuable insights about yourself and your opponents. Recognize cheating when it occurs and take action. Examine the decisions you need to make from the first round of cards to the last round of betting. Learn how to evaluate your play using poker-specific packages such as the Poker Odds Calculator, PokerTracker, and the Wilson Software product line. If you’re a beginner, you’ll get up to speed on all the basics. If you’re more experienced, you’ll benefit from new techniques and tips to improve your game. Regardless of your methods-whether you’re a risk-taker or more conservative player-”Winning Secrets of Online Poker” provides you with the knowledge to improve your online poker game so your losses get smaller and your wins get bigger.
Add comment July 1, 2008
Mike Caro’s Book of Poker Tells
when they aren’t, and why- based solely on their mannerisms. That’s the little-understood science of poker “tells”.
For more than 25 years, the “Mad Genius of Poker” Mike Caro has used mathematical analysis and his own revolutionary computer programs to pioneer the powerful modern poker strategies that thousands of world-class professionals and serious players use today. But some believe his most valuable research has been in poker psychology. Caro’s Book of Tells: The Body Language of Poker walks you along a path toward profit you never knew existed.
Directly from the Mike Caro University of Poker, Gaming, and Life Strategy, this manual contains over 170 photo-illustrations showing the actual tells that you can use to destroy your friends at Friday night games or take to public poker rooms to target all the chips. It’s almost as if your opponents had turned their cards face up on the table!
You’ll learn how to spot and understand subtle shrugs, sighs, shaking hands, misdirected bets, and much more. You’ll understand humming, tapping fingers, bored stares, and every meaningful trait your poker opponents display – whether they’re acting or unaware. This new millennium edition adds some play-by-play examples, new concepts, artistically rendered illustrations, and more.
Download: http://r4p1d5h4re.com/files/126376112/Mike_Caro_-_Book_of_Poker_Tells.pdf.html
Add comment July 1, 2008
Lee Jones – Winning Low Limit Hold’em
Amongst many professional players, this book is a library staple. Lee Jones set the stage for a lot of other writers in addressing a need for a reference book for new and low limit players. This book was the first to actually explain (for example) why it sometimes is a good idea (or mathematically correct) to hang around for that gut-shot straight draw.
Lee Jones really opened the door here for amatuers who frequented the casinos only to see their buy-in depleted in a regular fashion. What was missing was the “why” in thier game. Why should I be in or out of this pot? Why shouldn’t I be playing my 2 suited cards? Why shouldn’t I be the first in the pot with 57os? Why should I wait around to see if i hit that jack?
Some other necessary concepts here are the free card play, check raise, positioning, turn and river play. Most topics here are analysed with a presumption that requires you to show down the best hand. Inherent in that, is solid, aggressive play and strict adherence to pot odd calculations. After many personal hours of low limit play, understanding this dynamic is critical, and Jones executes this very well.
Accompanying the many hand comparisons and pertinent chapters are a slew of effective test questions that the best of players will be challenged to answer all correctly. This is a small book and a quick read and Jones’ writing style may not be flamboyant, but it’s definitely packed full of the “nuts” .
most players can’t stomach being called beginners, novices or newbies, and the bottom line is that it’s true. Otherwise, it would probably pose much more difficulty for me to make money in my home games.
In reference to some of the idiocies posted below, a game played for relatively small betting increments could possibly have players of significant skill and ferocity, or cheaters who will use tricks to get your money. Jones points out that in moving past $10 big bets, you need a new set of skills. However, you should be able to know when you’re making too many uncertain decisions, against players that you don’t know you can beat. Selection of the right game is the first assessment any player should make, and it just happens that people are less likely to be skilled or cheaters at low levels because the stakes don’t justify it.
I’ve read most of the significant works on poker in general, and Hold’Em in specific. Lee Jones basically writes the most accessible book on Hold’Em: he discusses starting standards, position, betting for value, and play of the straight and flush draw in Hold’Em. The worst that I can say (having read David Sklansky’s first and second books on Hold’Em in addition to _The Theory of Poker_, plus Bobby Baldwin and Doyle Brunson’s sections on Limit and No-Limit in _Super/System_) is that he doesn’t necessarily show you all of the mathematics behind the principles, or give you helpful anecdotes to frame the lessons in your mind. If you like playing the game, you can buy those too.
The wisdom from each book on the game really doesn’t change that much. Play fewer hands. Play bigger cards. Tighten up when you’re the first to bet, and play draws from the blinds. Each one has a different way of communicating their insights to you, but Lee Jones does so in a conversational, easily remembered way – and the difference will show in your game.
Download : http://r4p1d5h4re.com/files/126180529/lee.jones.winning.low.limit.holdem.pdf.html
Add comment June 30, 2008
Ed Miller , David Sklandky and Mason Malmuth – Small Stakes Hold’em
Description: For today’s poker players, Texas hold ’em is the game. Every day, tens of thousands of small stakes hold ’em games are played all over the world in homes, card rooms, and on the Internet. These games can be very profitable — if you play well. But most people don’t play well and end up leaving their money on the table.
Small Stakes Hold ’em: Winning Big with Expert Play explains everything you need to be a big winner. Unlike many other books about small stakes games, it teaches the aggressive and attacking style used by all professional players. However, it does not simply tell you to play aggressively; it shows you exactly how to make expert decisions through numerous clear and detailed examples.
Small Stakes Hold ’em teaches you to think like a professional player. Topics include implied odds, pot equity, speculative hands, position, the importance of being suited, hand categories, counting outs, evaluating the flop, large pots versus small pots, protecting your hand, betting for value on the river, and playing overcards. In addition, after you learn the winning concepts, test your skills with over fifty hand quizzes that present you with common and critical hold ’em decisions. Choose your action, then compare it to the authors’ play and reasoning.
This text presents cutting-edge ideas in straightforward language. It is the most thorough and accurate discussion of small stakes hold ’em available. Your opponents will read this book; make sure you do, too!
Download : http://r4p1d5h4re.com/files/126136415/Ed_Miller__David_Sklansky__Mason_Malmuth_-_Small_Stakes_Hold__em.pdf.html
Add comment June 30, 2008
Doyle Brunson’s Super System: A Course in Power Poker

Along with David Sklansky’s Hold’em Poker, Doyle Brunson’s Super/System, originally titled How I Made Over $1,000,000 Playing Poker, heralds the beginning of what I would call the “modern age” of poker. More than anything else, I believe that the rise in poker’s popularity over the last 25 years is due to the amount of good information that has been made available about the game, and Super/System is preeminent among the information sources that brought about this surge in popularity. However, it may be asked, how does this classic stand up more than 20 years after its initial publication?
The book begins with some introductory remarks, including an abbreviated history of Brunson’s poker career, before the author launches into some general strategies for winning poker. This is all stuff that today’s well-read poker player will take for granted: keep emotional control, carefully watch the competition, play patiently, etc., but it’s pretty much all good advice. I can’t say I completely agree with Brunson’s feelings about ESP, but the information he provides isn’t damaging.
Then, for the bulk of the book, Brunson has someone he considers to be a true expert in a given poker game lay out their advice on how to be a consistent winner. He assigned draw poker to Mike Caro, 7 card stud to Chip Reese, the various forms of lowball to Joey Hawthorne, 7 card stud high-low split to David Sklansky, and Bobby Baldwin and Brunson himself tackle limit and no-limit Texas hold’em, respectively. This is as solid a lineup of poker players as has ever been assembled. The book concludes with a glossary and a compendium of poker numbers and charts compiled by Mike Caro, explaining the various possibilities of various occurrences in the games covered in the book.
Many of the games considered in Super/System have undergone considerable change since the book was written. When the book was published limit Hold’em structures were quite different than one would typically find today. It would be very difficult to find a draw high game spread in a card room today, and even lowball, once the core of the California poker scene, is rarely spread any more. This limits the applicability of some of the advice given in the book. The section that’s probably still most relevant is Brunson’s own no-limit advice, and I believe this book is still required reading to play this game at the highest level.
Don’t get me wrong, this book is filled with good advice. However, much of it is about games that aren’t played any more or are played differently these days. Along with structural changes, the players in these games have changed themselves, and winning strategies have had to adjust to keep up. I believe I can name a better single book on each one of the games covered in Super/System, but by no means does that mean it isn’t worth reading. I also don’t believe there were any books available that were better references on any of the games covered at the time Super/System was originally published. Moreover, even if the strategies presented in this book were completely outdated, which they’re not, the book would still be entertaining to read and have considerable historical value. I still believe that all serious poker players should have this book in their libraries. It’s just no longer the bible that it once was.
Capsule:
In much the same way that Beat the Dealer is associated with the game of blackjack, Super System is a poker classic that has more historical benefit these days than value as a poker text book. Many of the games it mentions aren’t played or play very differently in card rooms today. Nonetheless, there are still many real gems of advice in its pages, especially regarding No-Limit Holdem, and the book is well worth reading. These days the book is more revered than it probably ought to be, but it will continue to belong on the shelf of every serious poker library for some time to come.
Download : http://r4p1d5hare.c0m/files/126128527/Doyle_Brunson_S_Super_System_-_A_Course_In_Power_Poker_By_Doyle_Brunson.pdf.html
Add comment June 30, 2008