S.W. Erdnase, Preface of The Expert at the Card Table
In offering this book to the public the writer uses no sophistry as an excuse for its existence. The
hypocritical cant of reformed (?) gamblers, or whining, mealymouthed pretensions of piety, are
not foisted as a justification for imparting the knowledge it contains. To all lovers of card games it
should prove interesting, and as a basis of card entertainment it is practically inexhaustible. It may
caution the unwary who are innocent of guile, and it may inspire the crafty by enlightenment on
artifice. It may demonstrate to the tyro that he cannot beat a man at his own game, and it may
enabled the skilled in deception to take a post-graduate course in the highest and most artistic
branches of his vocation. But it will not make the innocent vicious, or transform the the pastime
player into a professional; or make the fool wise, or surtail thae annual crop of suckers, but
whatever the result may be, if it sells it will accomplish the primary motive of its author, as he
needs the money.
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