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Some reviews of the poker biography “Missouri & Me”

Tahoe Tribune- Snapshot

Glen Garrod recounts the days of old-school poker in ‘Missouri & Me’

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LAKE TAHOE, Calif./Nev. – With a colorful cast of characters, casinos and poker chips, Glen Garrod tells tales of his time as a professional poker player in his book “Missouri & Me, A Poker Odyssey.” Garrod spent much of his time in the card rooms of Tahoe, though his stories span all over the globe. “My heart’s in Tahoe, even though it’s not the place for me these days,” said Garrod.

The book is made up of short vignettes into the world of poker, from when Garrod learned to play to his heart-pounding tournaments and high-stakes bets in the World Series of Poker. In between, he names players like Flyer, Lenny the Levitator, Cowboy Tom and the eponymous Missouri Dave—one of his closest friends and a legend among many poker players.

Garrod wrote the book during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, thinking it wasn’t a good time to be playing cards in close proximity with others. He collaborated with an old friend, who was a creative writing professor in Sacramento, to get down a manuscript, writing every night after dinner

“It was a nice collaboration with a lot of old poker players,” said Garrod, who called them up to hear their perspectives on experiences they’d shared. “And it was nice to revisit poker by writing about it and getting the creative juices going on these stories.”

Garrod had plenty of them—he had to cut down hundreds of thousands of words from his initial manuscript. “Some are funny, some are profound, some are sad. But the stories I have in the book are included for a reason.”

Many of those stories evoke a Tahoe from a different time, where cards were still dealt in the North Shore Club, Crystal Bay Club, and the Hyatt in the north and the Sahara Tahoe and Harvey’s were the setting for plenty of big games.

Garrod was there for many of those legendary times, including the Big Game. “Prior to us starting that, there weren’t any big games in Tahoe. In 1987, the buy-in was $300. In 2014, the last time we ran it, the buy-in was $10,000.”

Even if you’re not a poker aficionado, Garrod recalls those moments where the cards are on the table in a way that non-players can understand. “Not a lot of poker writers talk about the emotions when you’re playing for those high stakes, what influences those decisions and the critical thinking that goes into those big hands, and that’s something I tried to do here.”

Garrod acknowledges that the era he’s written about is very different than now—poker’s legalization in California was a huge shift, and the skyrocketing popularity of the sport after Chris Moneymaker’s win was seismic.

Even the casinos have changed in Tahoe. “I was shocked to see that the casinos charge for parking now! In the old days, they would do anything to get people in there, like serve food on the cheap. Now, the culture has shifted.”

But the culture that Garrod remembers is what he wants to share with readers. “I want people to see that poker, way back when, was a subculture in America. People from all over the country would ply their trade. They were honest, trustworthy men of their word.”

Indeed, Garrod and Missouri Dave, who visited card rooms all across America, were recognized and respected for their character. “We were a fraternity of tight-knit people. There’s not really that close connection these days as far as I’ve seen,” said Garrod wistfully. “But everyone has their own story. We’re all a collection of our own stories and that’s something I’m trying to tell.”

You can read more about the book on the website MissouriAndMe.com. Here’s an exclusive taste of Garrod’s writing on South Lake Tahoe that he shared with the Tribune–a story not in the book, but riveting all the same:

“One of the first places I played poker in a casino card room was at the old Sahara Tahoe. It was a poker room like no other. The dealers and the managers were like one very big happy family, most of whom loved to play poker. There were dealers with colorful names like The Martian, Old Dad, The Kid, Crusher, Blackie, Doggie and the Rat.

The Uncle was known for dealing his shift, taking off his clip-on tie and switching from the dealer’s chair to a players seat and then 16 hours later he’d switch seats again and clip the tie back on. The Hurricane, named for his sometimes volatile antics, though a jam-up poker player would at times be reduced to a tropical storm.

The efficiency, joy, and the esprit de corps the employees of that card room exhibited was infectious to all who entered and made it the absolute poker capitol of northern Nevada throughout the seventies and eighties.

Players like Mr. Hold’em and Missouri Dave became legendary in poker mythology in Lake Tahoe and beyond. When Texas Hold’em became legal in California many from that historic card room were scattered around the Golden State and became poker room managers and casino executives.

Lots of those people from that era remain bonded today. Sparky, the left-handed shortstop from The Nickel Snatchers, the poker room softball team, still deals at what was until recently Harvey’s.”

Paule Castro

In  making this site for Glen of course I needed to read the book to understand how to reliably  and straightforwardly present the information for visitors.

I may normally not have read such a book,  as professional poker playing is well  outside my normal experience.
If this is you, do not let it put you off! I loved it.

Becoming totally absorbed in a world very different than I had imagined:
I read compelling tales of movie like characters  related with laser clarity by its author Glen Garrod who has a keen eye and a sharp mind for the analysis of risk and capabilities of people written down in the same concise and analytical way as the game is played.

No-one is reviled, many are admired and often  folk in the narrative will of course stumble usually  to get up again as fortunes are won and lost.

Of special interest to me was Glenn’s proactive adventure into creating a new casino game based on Texas Holdem  he had promoted as a business to casinos.

Editors have reported that every math formula or figure  presented in a book will reduce sales by half-
But this is neither a statistical nor math book.
else I would have put it down
but of colorful strategists, artfully drawn.
It does have occasinal  diagrams of the stages of games
that help if you understand the game,
but it’s not strictly necessary knowledge.

It’s more like a psychology reader of  warfare and covert strategies  of the many people you and I know in daily life,
but magnified  by being around a magical baize
(the fabric!)  poker table where much is ‘at stake’

The additional benefit is I too felt I was  around darkened card tables experiencing  a poker focused  brotherhood and to lesser extent sisterhood that spans many years and locations few have any insight about-

Until now.

By the way- there is in back a glossary of poker terms for clarity, many of which have made their way to expressions we often use

Thanks for the opportunity to ‘be’ there with you Glen at those  tables even if only for a little while and as just an observer!

He pointed out when asked:

“It’ s not gambling for me, only for them’.

— Paule Castro, Jan 2026

Las Vegas Advisor

This is from the June 12, 2025 edition of 
"The Anthony Curtis' Las Vegas Advisor"

Question::

My father-in-law is a lifetime poker player and he just loves telling poker stories. In his 80s, we’ve all heard them all 100 times and he’s gotten the message that we’re pretty much over them already. So now, he loves reading poker stories. He loved your book The 50 Greatest Poker Stories and told me that he wished it never ended and is waiting for the sequel. Are you working on one? And if not, do you have another book of poker stories you can recommend?

Answer:

We waited awhile to answer this question — until a great new book of poker stories was published. We’re not planning a sequel to The 50 Greatest Stories in Poker History, but the new book, Missouri & Me — A Poker Odyssey, will more than suffice.

Missouri & Me is written by Glen Garrod, a poker pro for nearly five decades. His career began in college in California in the 1960s, then moved up to Lake Tahoe and Reno in the early ’70s, where it stayed on and off, mostly on, for the next 25 years. This was decidedly old-school poker, as Glen writes, “a time when the poker community was small and connected by yearly tournaments that weren’t overly populated and by road gamblers who spread stories that became embedded in poker mythology.”

From his home base in northern Nevada, Glen roamed the U.S. and Europe, playing as he went, with numerous back-in-the-day adventures that your 80-year-old father-in-law can no doubt relate to. The stories in the beginning are more about the players, eccentrics every one, and various settings on the long road trips that involved poker and plain old hippie wanderings, than the games. But as the chronology progresses, they turn more to the tournaments and individual hands that stand out in Glen’s memory, which is ferocious.

The Missouri of the title refers to “Missouri” Dave, a legendary poker player on the old road-gambler circuit, with whom Glen formed a lifetime friendship. He writes, “Missouri Dave is a laser-focused assassin to whom most of his weaker opponents appear mentally naked and defenseless. Bolstered by a lifetime of playing, he has total command of every aspect of the game. His intuitive abilities are finely tuned. It would be fairly accurate to say Missouri Dave plays poker on a higher plane than most.”

More characters your father-in-law will enjoy reading about include Sailor Roberts, Flyer, Cornbread, Laughing Al, Cowboy Tom, Suitcase Jimmy, Tuna, and Lenny the Levitator, among many others. There are also appearances by Benny Binion, Amarillo Slim, Freddie Deeb, Richard Pryor, David Mamet, and the Grateful Dead. Vietnam, cocaine (“a tsunami that swept through many of America’s poker rooms”), “The Biggest Pot I Ever Won,” and numerous World Series of Poker stories round out the book.

The stories are fast-paced and entertaining, but when Glen describes the individual hands, such as in Chapter 7 on the World Series of Poker and with seven “Big Hands in the Big Game,” they slow down to the tempo of the poker, with all the attending drama, tension, agony of bad beats, and triumph of scooping big pots that you’d expect from a 313-page book of poker stories. Also, we were happy to see the suits of the playing cards in the text and the graphics of the cards themselves in the showdowns. That’s impressive, especially for a self-published book, and bring the hands to life.

Missouri & Me is available as an ebook on Amazon for $9.99. But we suspect your father-in-law will be happier with the trade paperback, which can be purchased at the book’s website for $19.99 (plus shipping); also at MissouriAndMe.com, you can get a little deeper look into the book.

We’re confident when we say that Missouri & Me will keep your father-in-law in poker-story heaven for a good long time — and hopefully, he won’t repeat them to you and your family, though we’re sure he’ll be tempted to!

 

Bob Malone

I am just finishing up Missouri and Me.

 I think Glen Garrod has a very accessible concise and entertaining style of writing. The quick jabs of the stories he tells play out like poker hands, some are over quick, some take much longer, but the tension of the outcome of each one is well maintained. The poker life that Glen and Missouri Dave chose, is revealed to me in reading Glen’s stories. You got to love the life.  And it is clear, they love the life.

In one of the final chapters, Glen explains that even today he still gets a sensation, a thrill, whenever he first enters a poker room, hears the ‘cricket-like clatter’ of poker chips. I know a little about that because I still feel a bit of a twinge whenever I walk into a pool room. Though I never achieved what Glen, and Missouri Dave achieved in their specialty, I had my moments on a pool table way back – long lost as to any skill at the game today – but yet it resonates with me when I hear the ceramic click of those pool balls.  As Fast Eddie Felson said in ‘The Hustler’, ‘Didn’t know you could get clay balls to move that way’.

 I really enjoyed reading the book. I would compare reading the book to reading Playing Off The Rail by David McCumber about the world of 9 ball. It opens up the adventure and explains the allure. A fun read that makes me respect even more those who took the risk and made it pay off.  I especially liked the story about schooling Richard Pryor. And the one about meeting Michael Ondaatje who was doing research for a novel (I now plan on reading Divisadero). All the stories about The Big Game were totally entertaining.

–Bob Malone
Portland, Oregon published poet and the writer of two novels.

 

Review: Dick Cooper

I purchased Glen’s book and am loving it. I am currently vacationing in the Cayman Islands. I brought 3 books with me. I can’t put Missouri and Me down long enough to even start the other two.

Dick Cooper, Nevada City, California

Review: Eve Imagine

I once had the opportunity to sit behind Glen as he played in a big money poker game. After forty-five minutes, I had to walk away because my anxiety levels were through the roof, broiling further as the piles of chips grew larger.

If you’re like me, you can’t help but be captivated by the notion of professional poker, and what it must be like to build a life on a career with such high stakes and where skill can take you far, but where luck also plays a role. Glen Garrod’s Missouri & Me realizes the romanticism of being at the table, on the road, and in the life of a professional poker player throughout the decades leading up to the online poker revolution.

This book offers an intimate look into the life of Glen Garrod, whose personal experiences and insights form the core of the narrative.

Glen’s unique voice and perspective draw readers into his world, fostering a deep connection with him and his close-knit group of friends, as well as the strangers he encountered along the chapters of his life.

His captivating stories provide an insider’s view of a master poker player, alongside the adventures of a man who embodies both carefree spirit and determination.

As you journey through the decades of Glen’s life, you’ll enjoy a fast-paced and entertaining ride filled with passion for the game and the bonds of friendship that surround it. From the opening chapters and through the end of this saga, my love for the author’s voice and his world grew and grew.

This book touched my heart and opened my mind. Read Missouri & Me and you’ll find yourself falling in love with Glen, Missouri Dave, and the exhilarating game of poker itself as it was before it went mainstream and we all went digital.

Eve Imagine, Editor, Missouri & Me

Review: Bob Wright

I am half way through your wonderful book – I am loving it!
I read it in bed and it assures me an ongoing grin –
Your style reminds me of a blend of Studs Terkel,
Hunter S. Thompson and some Carlos Castenada.
The book “Endurance” about a voyage to the Antarctic is widely declared the best adventure book ever written — but they haven’t read your book – each adventure stands alone as an exceptional case.
Your sense of principle stands out as does that of your compatriots – it speaks well of you. It is easy to appreciate how so many engaging people have befriended and trusted you.
I hope that a TV Producer turns it into a series as every story calls for even more texture.
I admire the life that you’re living —
I will be buying more to give to family and friends.
Thank you for authoring it and, I assume, for choosing a fine editor – and Kathy Dotson is nice to work with.
There is something about this area that attracts remarkable people – you certainly are one.
Sincerely,
Bob Wright, Nevada City