I liked it very much. Thought it was most interesting and true to life.shadroch said:I just finished Kevin Blackwoods "The Counter" and though it was complete drek. Is there a decent autobiography by someone with a good AP background who talks of his life in BJ?
This is quite funny because I have never met anyone who liked this book. Can you imagine page after page of your notes on playing being of interest to anyone? My records aren't even interesting to me.shadroch said:As an ironic aside, the google review of Blackjack Diary contains this quote.
"I've never met an advantage player who doesn't recommend this book".
I actually liked it - but then again, I am an accountant. :grin:Pro21 said:This is quite funny because I have never met anyone who liked this book. Can you imagine page after page of your notes on playing being of interest to anyone? My records aren't even interesting to me.
ExhibitCAA said:Actually, I thought the BJ Diary was a great book--sort of. As the text went on--page after page of repetitive, tedious, unimaginative, irrelevant details--I started to feel depressed, frustrated, disgusted. The thing was so revolting that I put the book down after not even making it halfway.
Then I took a deep breath and said, "This author captured PERFECTLY the life of the typical low-level counter." The prison grind in all its horrific glory.
Have to agree with this to a large extent. I used the exact same word in my review shortly after publication stating that the book was a "tedious" read. In fact, this has been on my books page for years:ExhibitCAA said:Actually, I thought the BJ Diary was a great book--sort of. As the text went on--page after page of repetitive, tedious, unimaginative, irrelevant details--I started to feel depressed, frustrated, disgusted. The thing was so revolting that I put the book down after not even making it halfway.
Then I took a deep breath and said, "This author captured PERFECTLY the life of the typical low-level counter." The prison grind in all its horrific glory.