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Tap City [Hardcover]

Ron Abell (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

As finalists in the First Annual Stretch Jackson Seven-Card Stud Poker Classic in Reno, Nevada, continue their battle for the big money ($300,000), pressures and tension increase along with the ante. Although Abell's sharp focus favors the poker game to the detriment of character development, he does create some rather droll idiosyncracies: Jerry Corbett impersonates an impeccably dressed, self-contained female without being discovered; Shayna Levinson flays her opponents with a sharp-edged tongue; and Brian Bates, a macho but insecure bodybuilder, intimidates the others by wearing shades and a skintight T-shirt. The game subsumes all, however, so anyone not interested in poker may find the terms and descriptions a bit intrusive. Oddly enough, the players themselves ultimately view this all-important event as meaningless. For larger collections. Rex E. Klett, Anson Cty. Lib., Wadesboro, N.C.
Copyright 1985 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 274 pages
  • Publisher: Little Brown & Co (T); 1 edition (August 1985)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0316002003
  • ISBN-13: 978-0316002004
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.9 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #457,005 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant, under-appreciated poker novel, March 10, 2010
This review is from: Tap City (Hardcover)
Tap City is about a fictional Seven-Card Stud Tournament (definitely not the World Series of Poker) hosted by fictional celebrity poker player Stretch Jackson (definitely not Amarillo Slim) in a fictional Reno casino, the Taj Mahal. The first part of the book sets the scene, describing several of the eventual participants in the game at various points over the previous few months, and the second half is the telling of what happens during the three-day tournament.

Instead of setting the tournament in sweltering Las Vegas, where the unrelenting heat would be an apt metaphor for the growing pressure of the tournament, Abell sets his first (and to my knowledge, only) novel in Reno. In January. He's a skilled enough writer that he makes the reader (or at least this reader) pine for Reno in January. If you've ever been in Reno in January, you know that's quite a feat. His description is so pitch-perfect and unvarnished that the reader is absolutely drawn in.

Abell creates memorable characters, like Lee Sherman Tobias, an aging poker warrior who might be a synthesis of Johnny Moss and Nick Dandalos; William "the Owl Avery," who seems to have a touch of a more academic Puggy Pearson; Vic Houston, who might be based on Doyle Brunson;and several characters based on no obvious real world counterparts, like the embittered former dealer Shayna, a cross-dressing down-on-his-luck actor named Jerry Corbett, Doug McGowan, cursed with beginner's luck, and insecure body builder and real estate scammer Brian Bates.

Through the device of the tournament, Abell distills, into a single event that must produce dozens of losers and one winner, all the drama of poker and gambling. There are real insights here into psychology-maybe stressed a bit too much by having a psychologist as an ancillary character, but interesting nonetheless. Tap City explores not just the dramatic nuts and bolts of poker playing-to raise or fold, bluff or check-but the soul behind the game, and by extension Reno.

It's a shame that this is the only novel Abell published. I definitely would read more from him. As it is, Tap City has both literary and historic value. It's funny to hear a character comment that next year, the World Series of Poker might have 200 players, and that it's gotten far too big. The mid-1980s also saw the beginning of the changing of the poker guard, as the road gamblers started to fade away, supplanted by a new rank of champions.

In short, Abell's novel is an engaging read (I got through it in just about one sitting) that also sheds light on the nature of gambling, the game of poker, and the city of Reno in a way that few other novels do. It's a highly recommended read.
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