Right Through the Pack

Right Through the Pack: A Bridge Fantasy is a 1947 book about the game of contract bridge by Robert Darvas and Norman de Villiers Hart. It includes 52 deals in which each of the 52 cards of the pack plays a significant role, described by and interspersed with comments from the playing cards themselves, the anthropomorphic "People of the Pack".

Right Through the Pack
AuthorRobert Darvas & Norman de Villiers Hart
CountryUnited Kingdom
SubjectContract bridge
Published1947
PublisherGeorge Allen & Unwin
Pages220

Background

Darvas (1906-1957) was the best-known Hungarian bridge journalist of his day.[1]:101 Hart (1888  after 1947) was an English bridge player and writer.[1]:200 Austrian bridge player and theorist Paul Stern had (being a Jew and also strongly anti-Nazi) sought refuge in London after Nazi Germany occupied Austria in the 1938 Anschluss. According to the Introduction to the book by English bridge writer Guy Ramsay, Stern had known Darvas in the 1930s and in his exile had become friends with Hart. Stern proposed a book by the two of them, combining the Hungarian's fantasy and wit and the Englishman's fancy and humour. Soviet Russia, which had taken control of Hungary after World War II, considered bridge a decadent game. By devious routes Darvas smuggled out his ideas for bridge deals to Stern, who passed them on to Hart, who wrote the narrative. There were still difficulties to overcome; they were solved by English bridge player and writer Ben Cohen, who gave the book its title and even managed to arrange for Darvas to come to England to see it through to publication.[2]

The book

The narrator has been involved in bridge all day  writing an article, playing rubber bridge, and taking part in a practice match. In the early hours of the morning, alone in a club cardroom puzzling over a deal from that day, the 52 cards speak with him and with each other, and each one tells him a story of a deal in which they had played a significant part. The narrator proposes to write a book about the tales of the People of the Pack; they are delighted by the idea. In the daylight, a club steward enters the cardroom and opens the window blinds. The steward asks the narrator if he has been asleep. "No, I have not been asleep."

All 52 deals contain points of technical interest, from the whimsical through the practical to the highly advanced. (For example, the penultimate deal involves the extremely rare hexagon squeeze, and the final deal describes a novel coup named the Robert coup after its discoverer, Robert Darvas.) Every card in Hart's narrative has their own distinct personality, and each suit has its own personality traits.

The book includes a handful of cartoons which depict some of the cards. They are uncredited, but resemble in style some of those by Fougasse, co-author and illustrator of the 1934 humorous book about bridge Aces Made Easy.[3]

The Robert coup

The 52nd and last deal in the book is "The Tale of the Four of Diamonds". It describes a coup, attributed to and named in honour of Robert Darvas, which involves (1) a ruff-and-discard, ruffed by the longer trump hand (or by both declarer and dummy) to shorten the trump holding and so preserve an exit card, and (2) forcing the other defender to ruff with a high trump to prevent a lower trump taking a trick en passant, and so endplaying him in the trump suit. The deal was:

953
K
9532
A6543
876

N

W               E

S

KJ10
Q3 J109876542
AJ108 -
10987 K
Lead: Q AQ42
A
KQ764
QJ2

The bidding went:

SouthWestNorthEast
1Pass23
4DblAll pass






The play began (with winning cards boldfaced):
   Trick 1: Q, K, 2, A
   Trick 2: K, A, 2, 4
   Trick 3: 10, A (declarer has no chance unless E has singleton K), K, 2
   Tricks 4-7: 3 to Q (a finesse), then A, Q, J
   Trick 8: 2, 8, 9, K

The position is now, with East to lead:

-
-
953
65
-

N

W               E

S

-
3 J10987
J108 -
9 -
4
-
Q764
-

Declarer ruffs the forced return with 4 (shortening his trumps to the same number as West) and overruffs in dummy with 5. A small is led from dummy and ruffed. North and South now each hold two trumps while West holds three; this is the key to the position. South leads 4. West must ruff high or declarer will make his tenth trick at once; but after doing so, is endplayed at trick 12 into leading into the split tenace in trumps (93 facing Q7).

The Bridge Players' Encyclopedia gives a different example deal.[1]:423424

Recognition

Bridge Players' Encyclopedia has called the book one of those which made "a major improvement to the technical development of the game".[1]:666, 672 In a 1994 ACBL poll, it was voted "One of the Top Three Bridge Books of All Time". Bridge player Randy Baron has said, "Without any doubt, the best bridge book ever written". Bridge player and writer Jeff Rubens has said, "This is my favorite bridge book, perhaps my favorite book, period. It has entertained me on every reading, and there have been many. What more can I say?"[4] Bridge player and writer Ron Klinger has said, "It is on virtually every magazine’s and player’s list of the top ten bridge books of all time and has become a bridge classic".[5]

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gollark: WHY DID YOU DO THIS

See also

  • List of bridge books

References

  1. Frey, Richard L.; Truscott, Alan F.; Cohen, Ben, eds. (1967). The Bridge Players' Encyclopedia. London: Paul Hamlyn. OCLC 560654187.
  2. Darvas, Robert; Hart, Norman de Villiers (1957) [1948 [sic]]. Right Through the Pack. Ramsay, Guy (2nd ed.). George Allen & Unwin. pp. Introduction.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  3. McCullough, W. D. H.; Fougasse (1934). Aces Made Easy. Methuen & Co.
  4. "Right Through the Pack". bridgehands.com. Retrieved 16 December 2017.
  5. Klinger, Ron (2008). "Right Through the Pack Again". Retrieved 15 December 2017.
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