Jack writes: "The Mad World of Bridge was my first book and based on a cover story I did on Charles Goren for Time. It was about all the craziness that goes on in the bridge world. Goren was in it, but there was a lot of other stuff, too, including murder and mayhem."
FROM THE DUST JACKET:
Today there are thirty-five million Americans sucking happily on the sore tooth of bridge, and the number has been in the tens of millions ever since auction had its vogue in the early 1900's. By 1938 Frank Condon told the readers of Collier's that the game had become "a menace to the future of the land" and "was costing the nation 273,586,312 working hours a day or enough time to build two Boulder Dams and one Panama Canal." Another social commentator called bridge a "disease." But however dangerous its malignancy or contagion, the game is here to stay. And Jack Olsen is here to be its lighthearted Boswell, with the first and only definitive book on what bridge means to the world and whether society can survive its grip.
A "must" treasure for all the millions of bridge players, THE MAD WORLD OF BRIDGE is history, humor, social commentary, and satire rolled into one. It is loaded with anecdotes of the events -- shocking or hilarious, from mayhem to politics -- and of the personalities -- from the obscure collegian who held thirteen spades to Culbertson, Goren, and other greats who give bridge its mad and wonderful hold on us.
The tournaments, the innovators, the kibitzers, the champions, the duffers, the great gaffes, and the exciting triumphs are all here in this gaily irreverent bible on bridge. (And to think it all started in the garden of whist, whence sprang bridge -- whist, which begot auction bridge which begot contract bridge which led to murder, divorce, suicide, mayhem, and other social evils.)
Jack Olsen, who started life thirty-four years ago in Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania, worked his way into humor writing, ironically enough, via the University of Pennsylvania, the U.S. Border Patrol, and the far-flung vineyards of the worlking press.
After a "dull" stint with O.S.S. in World War II as a cryptographer and radio operator, Jack Olsen worked for various newspapers in San Diego, Washington, D.C., New Orleans, and Chicago. In 1956 he switched over to Time magazine in Chicago and is currently working for Time, Inc., in New York.
Mr. Olsen is the ghostwriter of two recent political biographies and a contributor to such leading magazines as This Week, Playboy, Fortune, and Reader's Digest. He makes his home in Chappaqua, New York, with his wife and three children.