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The Counter [Paperback]

Kevin Blackwood (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 4, 2002
THE COUNTER is a truly authentic gambling novel, written by someone who spent years in the trenches. This book offers a rare glimpse into the intriguing life of a professional card counter, certainly one of the world’s most unique occupations.

The protagonist, Raven Townsend, decides he’s too good for Maine and shuns his poor New England upbringing. His grandiose plans of becoming a famous Biblical archaeologist suddenly get shelved when he takes a detour into the world of high stakes blackjack. His exceptional mathematical gifts, phenomenal memory, and incredible determination enable him to succeed where most fail—but at the expense of his girlfriend and original dreams.

Raven’s quest to win a million dollars in blackjack becomes the driving force in his life. However, a sharp-eyed casino surveillance expert stands in the way of Raven’s goal, producing a dramatic, page-turning finish in casinos from Reno to the Caribbean.



Editorial Reviews

Review

A well-crafted story with memorable action scenes, intriguing plot twists and character redemption. I really liked THE COUNTER. -- Stanford Wong, Blackjack Author

Engrossing is the only word to describe this fast-paced thriller that depicts the fascinating existence of a high-rolling card counter. -- Don Schlesinger, Author of BLACKJACK ATTACK

Fascinating look into the unique life of a professional card counter, written by one of the world's top players. -- Anthony Curtis, Las Vegas Advisor

Riveting insider's tour through the world of high stakes blackjack. Every page crackles with authenticity. -- Rob Wiser, Casino Player Magazine

About the Author

Kevin Blackwood lives in Oregon and drew from the real life experiences of some of the planet's top blackjack players in writing THE COUNTER.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 312 pages
  • Publisher: Wooden Pagoda Pr (February 4, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0971727309
  • ISBN-13: 978-0971727304
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #552,448 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

19 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:
 (7)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (19 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Frank Scoblete Says The Counter is a Job "Well Done", May 8, 2002
By 
"robmcgarvey" (Toronto, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Counter (Paperback)
I usually stay away from fiction books about gambling and casinos because often the author displays his or her total lack of knowledge of gambling games as the book progresses. That can get irritating when you've invested your time only to find out on page 103 that the writer hasn't a clue as to what happens in a casino or to casino players.

I remember once reading an otherwise decent book that took the protagonists to Atlantic City where they played blackjack using $20 purple chips and tried to hit to hands of 21, no matter what the dealer had showing -- and these characters, the author insisted, were supposed to be savvy gamblers. He even got the location of individual Atlantic City casinos wrong! (Aren't there supposed to be editors that check these things at major publishers?) It almost ruined the experience for me. Luckily, the author got them out of town before I got up and threw the book out. (The one glaring exception to the above was Mario Puzo's Fools Die, a brilliant book.)

So, when Kevin Blackwood's book came to me, it had to face my distrust of gambling fiction, and also the fact that I have never heard of the publisher. The book had obviously been read in galley form by some prominent gaming authorities as the back cover was liberally sprinkled with quotes about its virtues. Good enough to give me a reason to read some of it.

So I started reading. Immediately I was struck with a scene that I felt was labored and false. The protagonist, Raven Townsend, is playing at a casino and a young lady, obviously a chip hustler or hooker, is asking questions. The dealer is explaining the essence of card counting to her. Those questions were heavy-handedly designed, it seemed to me, to inform the readers about the mechanics of card counting and I thought, "this book is going to be laborious. I'll give it thirty pages."

It didn't take thirty pages. Once that initial, and strained, conversation took place, the book took off. I couldn't put it down. Blackwood weaved a world of professional blackjack with a quest for truth and identity, a love lost and found, and a rollicking series of adventures that culminated in a showdown at the conclusion that was teeth clenching and stomach tightening.

The Counter is a book that is everything its blurbs say it is. The blackjack information is right on the money. Scene after crackling scene I kept saying to myself: "I've been there and done that, wow!"

Mr. Blackwood knows the game inside and out, and he has liberally sprinkled the book with, I believe, true life adventures and thinly veiled true-life characters. (Blackjack buffs might be able to pin down these characters!)

Still a work of fiction has to be more than just a series of blackjack anecdotes, no matter how appealing. Such anecdotes are fine for nonfiction, how-to books in order to take away the tedium of reading serious strategic matters. A work of fiction has to have a search for truth, be it the little truth of an individual's existence that we can relate to or be it the big truths about the very nature of existence itself. A novel has to be, well, novel, in the strictest sense of that word. Otherwise why get involved? Why not just live your own life, which is novel enough?

Blackwood's first novel is indeed novel. His main character, Raven Townsend, is a fully drawn, unique individual with a moral compass that starts spinning uncontrollably as the story progresses. In fact, the core of the novel is Raven's search for his sense of self and the meaning of his life. At first, the love of God and a reverential fundamentalist Christianity consume him. He desires to be a great archeologist; he wants to discover Noah's Ark. He also wants to unload the guilt associated with a deed done in youth that has caused him shame. But as he attends and graduates college, money and materialism become his lifeboat. As he gets deeper and deeper into the world of professional blackjack play, and as his bankroll grows from a mere $5,000 to over $800,000, he becomes the foil, pawn, and then scapegoat of some very well-drawn, shady characters (one of them highly reminiscent of the late, great, blackjack guru Ken Uston).

He finds himself banned by casinos in Vegas, Mississippi and the Islands; he is hoodwinked by his cronies. He discovers that the girl he loves, a throwback to a time when women ruled the moral roost, is repelled by his career choice and disgusted with his growing immorality. His father, a man of simple vision and strong principles, is also disheartened by Raven's inability to see the hollow nature of his lucrative blackjack calling. The book insightfully creates a dramatic tension between characters -- father/son, friend/friend, casino/counter, lover/beloved -- and among partners in the business of blackjack. However, the moral struggle within the character of Raven himself is at the core of the book.

The title itself can have various meanings. The "counter" with the small "c" is Raven, and what he counts are cards and money and, as the book revs up, his mistakes. But the "Counter" with a capital "C" can also stand for the Creator, God, or the Great Spirit of Raven's part-Indian heritage, who counts our ways and numbers our days. Raven is indeed on a quest for knowledge and, despite his fundamentalist leanings, he experiments with a "vision quest" (ala Carlos Castenada who wrote The Teachings of Don Juan), participates in an archeological dig in the holy land, and examines his conscience throughout.

The book's climax is both tense and exhilarating. It ends...well, that's for you to find out.

While there is some intermittent and occasionally awkward dialogue, along with some corny witticisms here and there, on the whole and in its parts, Blackwood's literary style is smooth, consistently straightforward and admirably concrete. This is a novel I can recommend to anyone interested in a good read. Congratulations, Mr. Blackwood, on a job well done.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Most authentic gambling story, July 7, 2003
By 
This review is from: The Counter (Paperback)
Not only is Kevin Blackwood's story provocative and riveting, but as a long-time professional gambler myself, I can absolutely vouch for its authenticity. If you have ever dreamed about living the glamorous life of the professional gambler, this is a MUST read. Be prepared however; living "high off the hog" at the expense of the largest, most exotic casinos in the world, may not be all that's it's cracked up to be - especially for the novel's hero and protagonist, who struggles to find a moral high ground in a sea of gorgeous women, money, booze, and other temptations...
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Playing with a full deck!, October 15, 2002
By 
Rebecca Brown "rebeccasreads" (Clallam Bay, WA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Counter (Paperback)
As a teenager, Raven Townsend severs all ties with his failure of a father, & finds religion on the tiny New England island of his birth. While at college, he single-mindedly studies to become a Biblical archaeologist & struggles to keep himself "pure" for the girl he fell in love with.

Then, just before his graduation year, when money is tight, he is introduced to Black Jack, discovers he can count the dealer's cards & makes more money in one evening than during a whole summer of hard labor, or scratching around in a desert somewhere unearthing artifacts.

Soon he decides to put his career on hold & make his fortune in the less dirty, more challenging world of America's casinos - until they start recognizing him, & then banning him.

THE COUNTER is not only a story about one young man's life experiences, it is also about circles touching circles, & taking the opportunities given us to find redemption & fulfillment.

An interesting, unusual read!

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
If it had not been for a single, vacant parking space, all the events that transpired that evening would have been avoided. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
blackjack team, trespass act, top bet, blackjack player, card counting, gambling world, card counters, pit bosses, counting cards, casino manager, blackjack games
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Las Vegas, Atlantic City, Marco Antonelli, Howard Goldberg, New Orleans, Randolph Townsend, Raven Townsend, Harry Read, Native American, Joel West, Pastor Cook, South Africa, University of Chicago, Victor York, Wheaton College, New Jersey, Dodge Dart, William Townsend, Cynthia Bradford, Great Spirit, Holy Land, Lake Charles, Big Easy, Garren Horne, Griffith Agency
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