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21: Bringing Down the House: How Six Students Took Vegas for Millions
 
 

21: Bringing Down the House: How Six Students Took Vegas for Millions [Kindle Edition]

Ben Mezrich
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (49 customer reviews)

Digital List Price: £7.16 What's this?
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Review

"Rocky Mountain News" (Denver) A lively tale that could pass for thriller fiction....Mezrich's skilled yet easy writing draws sweat to the reader's brow.

Review

Real life all too rarely offers stories that are as satisfying as fiction. Bringing Down the House is one of the exceptions. Cheating in casinos is illegal; card counting - making a record of what cards have so far been dealt to enable the player to make some prediction of what cards remain in the deck - is not. But casinos understandably dislike the practice and make every effort to keep card-counters out of their premises. Mezrich tells the true story of the most successful scam ever, in which teams of brilliant young mathematicians and physicists won millions of dollars from the casinos of Las Vegas, being drawn in the process into the highlife of drugs, high-spending and sex. An insight into a closed, excessive and utterly corrupt world.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
22 of 22 people found the following review helpful
By Paul Robinson VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
This is the most bizzare blackjack book I've ever read. There is enough information in it to pick up the absolute bare minimum basics to count cards, but as a biogrpahy, it reads like a novel.

The story is discussed elsewhere. The author who took up Kevin Lewis' words and put them onto the page previously only worked on works of fiction, and you can feel his desire for high drama. To be honest, I've read a lot of gambling books and this was only the second I've ever read where I literally didn't want to put it down. That sounds cliched, but I literally stayed up until 5am reading this book and missed a morning of work.

This is not really a gambling book though. The point is, as the book comes to a close, it becomes evident that the pit bosses now are able to spot team play. It's a dangerous game to play, and in the UK it can be dealt with in all sorts of horrible ways. The tells and signals of team plays are now obvious to the dealers and bosses and preventative measures have been taken to try and wrap this up. Do not buy this book if you think you and your friends are going to be able to try it out and make some money. If you want to make money, use this book as a guide to what has already been done and would now fail.

If you want a cracking read, and trust me this is less patronising and more realistic than most novels you could find, this is a great little book. It shows that Vegas is addictive, nasty and driven on greed. It shows how a clever young man can see his life suddenly shift away from him, out of control. It allows you for just a few minutes, to dream about being a player. Just don't think, even though this is a true story, any of it's real - that's what Vegas is all about.

5 stars, for me a must read, the New York Bestsellers list can't be wrong. Go for it.

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
In the beginning I felt a bit confused by the way in which the book was written. Some chapters were written from the experiences of the author while some were written in third person and on top of all that it was shelved in the Biography section in the local bookstore. Once I had established what was what and who was who I really started to enjoy the book. It's about a group of MIT boffins who make a heap of money by counting cards in any casino where there's a free seat.

What's fascinating is not the exact mechanics of counting the cards (this is too difficult for a dummy like me to understand though it is explained) but it's more about the way in which they deceived the wary casino operators and the twin lives they had to live. For instance, to transport the amount of cash the team had to use some members literally strapped hundreds of thousands of dollars to their bodies whilst trying to edge past airport security.

The story is effectively told from the viewpoint of one of the main team members, namely Kevin. Kevin doesn't deny that his alter profession is profitable but for him it was the thrill of deception that really turned him on as well as the NFL Cheerleader he saw on his every visit, one of the many advantages of being a high roller. Other advantages included free rooms and tables appearing from nowhere in a full booked restaurant. As long as the risks were in his favor it was fine to keep on doing what he did so well. But within the ranks were colleagues that treated card counting as a career, which spelt trouble.

To some extent the last third of the story reads more like a mystery thriller which is great but unfortunately Monsieur Poirot was not on hand to solve the crimes. Shame. But you can draw you're own conclusions quite easily. The next time I step into a casino I will be looking for those hand and verbal signals that maketh a card counter and I shall grin with great joy. If only it were that easy.

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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful
Exciting story 24 Feb 2006
By MrShev
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is the story of how a bunch of M.I.T. Students developed a system that enabled them to play blackjack and win, and win big. The story is told, ostensibly, from the point of view of Kevin - one of the big players - and occasionally from other viewpoints. It charts their story, how they did it, where they did it and what they did with the money.

This is an illuminating book which highlights a flaw in the system (which I guess is not there anymore!)which these students exploit. It is exciting and it does give all of us a glimpse into the highlife of big-league American gambling, who inhabits this world and what they get up to. It is difficult not to have a certain amount of sympathy for them as casinos are built with the prime purpose of fleecing punters but I did detect a certain amount of arrogance that I think was their Achilees Heel.

I gave this four stars because it is a great story, simply told. The book is like Vegas: exciting and worth visiting but if you scratch the surface you find it is essentially shallow. Good book for a plane, or if you are visiting Vegas, but nothing more than that.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
good read BUT nothing really happens...
if you want to learn how to get one up on las vegas, then read fortunes formula. this book would make a great fictional story, but the fact that nothing actually happens in the... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Gcrikey
Counting Cards
Great read, really enjoyed it. I read the Facebook one by the same author and that was the reason for picking up this book. Read more
Published 9 months ago by J. Livsey
A Brilliant Read, One Hell of a Story
This is the true story of how six students broke Vegas(apparently most of it was make up, but when a book is this good who cares). Read more
Published 13 months ago by ekb
badly written
This book was badly written and pretty disappointing really. I also didn't believe parts of it. The author has taken what should have been a very exciting scenario and has turned... Read more
Published 21 months ago by martin77
MIT students who taken on Vegas, interesting? Yes, read it again? No
This book is about how a group of students from MIT, took on the casinoes, by playing Blackjack and counting the cards. In some places it is interesting and even informative. Read more
Published on 28 Mar 2010 by Mr P
The true story of people who took the casino business for a ride
This book tells about a group of mathematically skilled gamblers who invented a way of beating casinos at blackjack. Read more
Published on 26 Dec 2009 by Printul Noptilor
Interesting but a bit of a let down
I think I must have set my expectation too high for this book. It all looks very flash and i expected the edge to come from it being based on a true events. Read more
Published on 8 Jan 2009 by Dean
Excellent book
Read this book in 2 sittings, it truly builds the drama and paints a fantastic picture of these maths geeks that took Vegas and other casinos for a fortune. Read more
Published on 12 Dec 2008 by coyote
Superb
This book is a true roller coaster ride through the life of Kevin Lewis. It is fast paced and really does read like a movie (whcich it obviously is now). Read more
Published on 13 Oct 2008 by Matt Peterson
Excellent book
I could recommend this book to anyone who is interested in Vegas and the world of gambling in particular. Read more
Published on 9 Sep 2008 by Trooper321
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