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Albert H. Morehead (1909–1966)

Author of Play According to Hoyle: Hoyle's Rules of Games

68+ Works 4,018 Members 21 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Albert H. Morehead

Play According to Hoyle: Hoyle's Rules of Games (1946) — Editor — 1,738 copies
Official Rules of Card Games (1887) 1,099 copies
Webster's New American Handy College Dictionary (1951) — Editor — 617 copies
On Bidding (1990) 17 copies
100 Great American Novels (1966) — Editor — 16 copies
Morehead on bidding (1964) 11 copies
The Pocket Book of Games (1944) 9 copies
Contract Bridge Summary (1963) 6 copies
Games for two (1980) 5 copies

Associated Works

Contract Bridge for Everyone (1948) — Editor — 22 copies

Tagged

bidding (8) board games (15) bridge (24) card games (158) cards (129) Checkout Not Permitted (8) dictionaries (15) dictionary (84) English (12) entertainment (13) gambling (10) game rules (18) games (692) games and puzzles (11) gaming (22) guide (9) handbook (12) hobbies (20) how-to (36) Hoyle (12) indoor games (10) language (16) library (12) Library; checkout not permitted (12) mmpb (8) NF (9) non-fiction (295) own (26) owned (12) paperback (38) PB (18) playing cards (9) poker (28) read (13) recreation (22) reference (447) rulebook (8) rules (74) solitaire (23) to-read (15)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

Complete rules on more than 300 popular card games.
 
Flagged
BLTSbraille | 4 other reviews | Oct 19, 2021 |
Hey you, yeah, the person reading this thing. Have you ever wanted to learn how to play Whist? This book could probably help you with that. First printed in 1742, this book has been expanded to include more modern games. The first games it covers are card based games. Pinochle, Whist, Rummy, and so on. It has a method of sorting it according to categories, but I don't get the precise method. This book also covers dice games and board games. After describing the main category of the game, it talks about the derivations and other things. Lastly, it talks about video games, but I don't really know if that is necessary though. I mean, it talks about Freecell, Minesweeper and other stuff.

I picked up this book since it looked interesting, and because I wanted to know what a "trick-taking game" was supposed to be. In that sense, it delivered. It has a glossary at the back that tells you what a trick is, what a meld is, and so on. It also has further references for some reason, but you could probably just Google that sort of thing.
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Flagged
Floyd3345 | 10 other reviews | Jun 15, 2019 |

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Statistics

Works
68
Also by
1
Members
4,018
Popularity
#6,281
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
21
ISBNs
84
Languages
1

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