Dead Man’s Hand Crime Fiction at the Poker Table

If ever a subject begged to be associated with crime it is gambling, writes Otto Penzler in his introduction to this collection of short stories set at the poker table and beyond. In Walter Mosley’s Mister In-Between, a bagman is sent to collect from a rigged poker game, but soon begins to wonder who the real mark is. In One Dollar Jackpot, Michael Connelly’s detective Harry Bosch finds himself looking for tells when facing off against a professional poker player in the interrogation room. And a young woman learns how to bluff the hard way in Hardly Knew Her, by Laura Lippman. In these and others stories, aces of the mystery-writing world—including Joyce Carol Oates, Alexander McCall Smith, Jeffery Deaver, John Lescroart, and others—combine to form a winning hand.

Reviews

Superlative . . . Penzler knows which writers are hot, and he proves it here.

Boston Herald

Boston Herald
It’s the people, living and dead, who stay in the memory after the last page has been turned, the last letter-perfect description of a vanished world has touched a chord, the last note of swing music has been played.

Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune
Holmes’s clever period mystery [gathers together] the bitter and the sweet, and makes the kind of music you want to hear.

The New York Times Book Review

The New York Times