Poker has always been America's game, but poker is changing these days.
In a big way. Ask a friend or neighbor with only a casual knowledge of
the game to offer an image of poker, and one of three pictures is likely to
appear:
Poker is a game played by Mississippi riverboat gamblers with pencil-fhin
moustaches, fast hands, and a derringer hidden up their ruffled sleeves, or
it's played by gunfighters of the Old West (men like Doc Holliday, Wild Bill
Hickok, and Bat Masterson). Welcome to Dodge City, pardner. Check your
guns at the marshal's office and pull up a chair.
Another picture of poker comes right out of the movie, The Sting. Imagine
1930s Chicago mobsters, a round table, a low-hanging lamp illuminating the
thick cigar smoke rising from the ash tray, guys with shoulder holsters and
snub-nosed 38s, a bottle of cheap Scotch on the table, and someone the size
of an NFL linebacker stationed by the peep-hole at the door.
There's a kinder, gentler version too. This is a picture of Uncle Jack and Aunt
Gertie playing poker around the kitchen table for pennies, and somehow all
the nieces and nephews always come away winners.
Poker has been all of these things, and more. Although your authors are far
too young to have gambled with Doc Holliday or played cards with Al
Capone, both are familiar with the kitchen table introduction to America's
national card game.
Full chapter only in the printed book