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Repeat Until Rich: A Professional Card Counter's Chronicle of the Blackjack Wars

Repeat Until Rich: A Professional Card Counter's Chronicle of the Blackjack WarsAuthor: Josh Axelrad
Publisher: Penguin Press HC, The
Category: Book

List Price: $25.95
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Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 25 reviews

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 272
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 6.4 x 1.3

ISBN: 1594202478
Dewey Decimal Number: 795.423
EAN: 9781594202476

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  • ISBN13: 9781594202476
  • Condition: New
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A deliciously wry, edge-of-the-seat memoir of making a fortune with card counters across a wide swath of blackjack in America.

At twenty-four, Josh Axelrad held down a respectable and ominously dull job on Wall Street. Adventure was a tuna fish sandwich instead of the usual turkey for lunch. Then one night, a stranger at a cocktail party persuaded him to leave the nine-to-five behind and pursue an unlikely dream: the jackpot. The stranger was a blackjack card counter, and he sold Axelrad on the vision of Vegas with all its intrigue, adventure- and cash.

Repeat Until Rich is Axelrad's taut, atmospheric, and darkly hilarious account of ditching the mundane and entering the alternative universe of professional blackjack. Axelrad has one thing in common with his team: Jon Roth, the leader and a former options trader; Neal Matcha, a recovering lawyer; Aldous Kaufman, a retired math Ph.D. candidate. They all thrived in the straight world, found success boring, and vowed to make life more exotic. Axelrad adopts Roth's philosophy-"repeat until rich"-and from his strategy and skill spring hasty retreats across casino floors, high-speed car chases, arrests on dubious grounds, and the massive cash paydays that make it all worthwhile.

Along the way, he unveils the tactics and debunks the myths of professional card counters. In team play, he's either the "big player," who bets the big money, or the "controller," who subtly coordinates the team's betting while wagering only the minimum himself. Counting is not illegal, and it's less intellectually daunting than its MIT-level mystique suggests. With clarity and wit, Repeat Until Rich proves the old gambler's maxim that "if you can tip a waiter, you can count cards." But it also proves how zealous, even forceful, casino bosses can be in "backing off" counters-seeing past their undercover methods and banning them from the tables. Josh soon grows to love all this trouble, and discovers, more than the money, what he needs most of all is the rush.

Filled with actual bad guys, chase scenes, and high stakes, Repeat Until Rich offers an intoxicating, unprecedented view of the dangerous allure of living off the cards and one's wits.




Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 25



5 out of 5 stars Review from a teammate   March 23, 2010
Randy Willberg
27 out of 29 found this review helpful

I have known the author, Josh Axelrad, for years. We have played blackjack together many, many times--dozens for sure, and possibly hundreds of hours. In fact I took a very young Josh on his first real casino sessions in which we did lose a bunch of money. (These sessions were so short, and so insignificant that Josh did not write about them in the book, although he did write about the early trip with that other team. The sessions I am referring to were part of that trip.) That's not to say, of course that we were not playing with an edge. Any professional gambler understands that in the short-term you lose almost as often as you win. It's the long-term that we're concerned with, and I can assure anyone reading this review that Josh's team and Josh himself most certainly were big winners overall.

I read an early draft of this book, and am still awaiting the arrival of the published version. Unlike some of the other recent books written about well-known teams, this book does not bend or exaggerate the truth. There isn't a need to, as what really happened is interesting and exciting enough. I had a hard time putting down the draft, and I lived much of what Josh writes about. In addition to being a truthful and accurate portrayal of life inside a professional blackjack team, the book is also extremely well-written. I consider Josh a friend, but had no idea he could write so well. I can say without reservation that you will enjoy this book. I can also say that I expect this will be the first of many books that Josh Axelrad writes. It's that good.

Well-done, Josh!



5 out of 5 stars Couldn't put it down   March 20, 2010
Rob Pen (Arvada, CO, US)
26 out of 30 found this review helpful

This book was a quick read...engaging, humorous at times and suspenseful. The events within his journey were shocking at times. A real behind the scenes perspective of the inner circle of card counters. I never realized that card counting was actually legal. And, how these teams actually went about mobilizing against the "system" was not only methodical, but became an art.


5 out of 5 stars A Dark and Deliciously Disturbing Gambling Tale   March 23, 2010
Jane Austen (Brooklyn, NY United States)
17 out of 19 found this review helpful

Memoirist Josh Axelrad is ostensibly writing about gambling, but he's really telling a coming-of-age story. The blackjack material is fascinating, of course -- Axelrad and his card-counting team members travel the country, escaping "heat" (from casinos who are onto their tricks), and trying not to get caught with large amounts of cash. But it's the insights into life as a young man in post-9/11 America that truly resonate, long after one puts the book down.

Axelrad's touch is light and deft, and tone is bitingly funny. He's harder on no one than himself. The result is a compulsively readable memoir of an angry boy who, ultimately, faces down his demons and becomes a man.



5 out of 5 stars Card Counting and More...   March 22, 2010
Steven D. Germain (Hastings-on-Hudson, New York USA)
19 out of 22 found this review helpful

Repeat Until Rich is a chronicle of professional black jack card counting but it is also (and importantly) much more than that. It is also a story of redemption, a coming of age story and a story of Recovery and the things about one's self that we have to admit in order to live up to (in the case of author, Josh Axelrad) one's prodigious talents. To realize that the unconscious exercise of talent can be a type of seduction and escape.

Axelrad could have been writing about himself when he writes of his youthful impressions of his step-Uncle, Eric, "He claims to have spent ten years, until he was thirty, utterly adrift, selling jewelry at fairs as a wandering hippie, but then he went to law school. He told the story in a way that made law school sound as if it took him four weeks. Then suddenly he was rich...He went from hippie to kazilionaire. He made it seem effortless, random." But as young Axelrad wonders, ..."there must have been more to him than that."

Like his Uncle Eric, Axelrad self presents in a way that can leave you scratching your head at his life of card counting but in this very moving memoir courageously shows us that there is much more to him than that.

This is the story of a young man who became a very good writer, and in the process, (you can imagine him cringing at the sound of this), grew up.



5 out of 5 stars More than a gambling book...an engaging and worthy memoir   March 26, 2010
L. Elliot
14 out of 16 found this review helpful

The tales of blackjack derring-do suggested by the book's cover are certainly here, and they are fun to read, but there is so much more besides--the subtitle is misleading, or at least incomplete. Axelrad is an intelligent, thoughtful, and morally engaged narrator who contemplates his own role in "the blackjack wars" as the story unfolds, conveying his behavior and motivations in a hard, honest light. His prose is particularly attuned to the absurdities and ironies of his profession, salted with humor that is by turns gleeful and grim. The narrator's unexpected descent into gambling addiction widens the emotional scope of the book and deepens the already complex picture that Axelrad presents. At base, Repeat Until Rich is a compelling and moving story about someone who zealously leaps onto an unbeaten path, thrilled at how well it seems to suit him, but then can't find his way back to the main road, and stumbles badly. There is an authentic, writerly voice here that puts Axelrad's book in the company of memoirs like the Barthelmes' Double Down, as much literary nonfiction as "gambling book." Don't be fooled by the cover--Repeat Until Rich is a truly serious and worthwhile book.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 25





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