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Poker
Tips
Caro's Book of Poker
Tells
Cardoza publishing has
recently reprinted another poker classic, Mike Caro's Book of Poker
Tells. Few poker books have been as widely read as this one, in it's
third major revision since it's original publication by Gambling Times,
Inc.. I own a copy of one of the printings of the Gambling Times edition
and the Cardoza edition. Besides reviewing the book, I can compare these
two versions of this material. In between the release of these was an
edition published by the Mike Caro University of Poker, Gaming, and Life
Strategy which I don't own.
Mike Caro's Book of Poker Tells begins with introductory material
that explains what this book is about, an explanation of the
nomenclature used, an explanation of the author's MCU Poker Charts, and
a prologue about "Caro's Law of Loose Wiring". These last two weren't
present in the Gambling Times edition. The introduction sets up the book
well. The reader receives a good idea of the direction in which this
book is headed.
The
next four sections cover various situations where players might exhibit
"tells". That is, players give away information about the strength of
their hands via their actions. These sections are titled, "Tells From
Those Who Are Unaware", "Tells From Actors", "Some General Tells", and
"The Sounds of Tells". Each tell is discussed separately. Each
explanation includes one or more photographs depicting the behavior in
question, a categorization of the tell, an explanation of what it means,
a discussion of what motivates this behavior, an estimate of the tell's
reliability, and an estimate of its value to an alert player. The tells
the author discusses have not changed since the original edition, except
that the pictures are a little smaller and most of the attire and hair
styles of the actors exhibiting the tells have been abandoned.
Two
criticisms I have of this book are that I don't believe the tell
reliability percentages are accurate, and I don't think the value per
hour of each tell is realistic. Of course, a great number of poker
players have read this book, and it has undoubtedly influenced the way
people play. Nonetheless, the reliability numbers are probably still
somewhat worthwhile if they are considered in relative terms. That is,
in the absence of other information it may be reasonable to assume that
a tell that Caro assigns a 97% reliability factor is more reliable than
one that has been assigned a 60% reliability factor. Still, this
information must be compiled on a player-by-player basis. Frankly, I
can't figure out how the value per hour statistics were generated, and
my advice would be to ignore these numbers altogether.
The
book wraps things up with a some summary information, a quiz on the
material the book covers, and some final thoughts by the author. The
overall flow to the book is well thought out, and the material is
presented in a clear and logical manner. Sometimes it is not immediately
obvious what behavior is on display in a given picture, but this can be
very hard to capture well in still photography. Even in those cases
where the photograph can be hard to decipher, the text accompanying the
picture is usually sufficient to understand what the author has in mind.
Despite some minor flaws and the age of the book (20 years as of this
review), Caro's Book of Poker Tells is still one of the most important
poker books ever written, and it's great that this book is still in
print. While this book will certainly be more relevant to live players
than it will to the online game, its principles are timeless and are
likely to be of benefit for any alert poker player in any poker game.
There are multiple poker books available on every aspect of poker except
for tells. One reason for this is because there is still little room for
improvement on Caro's landmark work. Largely as a consequence of this,
too little has been changed or added to make it necessary for someone
who owns the original edition of this book to need to upgrade. However,
no poker library would be complete without a copy of this book.
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