Good Books to Learn From

I've had/owned/borrowed a bunch. IMO you are WAY better off just playing and watching videos of great players. 99 Critical Shots and Bankin' with The Beard have some good info but a lot of them are confusing and a waste of time. I actually liked Pleasures of Small Motions. Nothing groundbreaking but to me it was good. To be brutally honest i've never met one good player that learned a damn thing from a pool book. They all took the game up, practiced, gambled, etc. On the job training is the best in this game.
 
I've had/owned/borrowed a bunch. IMO you are WAY better off just playing and watching videos of great players. 99 Critical Shots and Bankin' with The Beard have some good info but a lot of them are confusing and a waste of time. I actually liked Pleasures of Small Motions. Nothing groundbreaking but to me it was good. To be brutally honest i've never met one good player that learned a damn thing from a pool book. They all took the game up, practiced, gambled, etc. On the job training is the best in this game.
Yes, I believe you are accurate, for the most part. Probably what would be even better is having an instructor you could work with to hash out stroke problems or how to work the cue ball around, and maybe a book would be good to add onto what you already know or have questions about. I don't think books are a complete waste of time, but I wonder if some people read them to obtain a quick fix to problems they might have. Pool is a challenging sport when competing against experience players, there isn't really a quick fix too much of anything at that level.
 
To be brutally honest i've never met one good player that learned a damn thing from a pool book.

I doubt this is true.

They all took the game up, practiced, gambled, etc. On the job training is the best in this game.

I have no doubt this is true.


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Ray Martin's book on the Critical 99 Shots,
The title to that book suggests its just a description of shots. It is presented as a way of learning pool and is more than just how to do 99 shots. Anyone proficient in pool has learned these shots although they may have stumbled upon them over many years and discussions. This is superior to learning by happenstance.
 
I just purchased this audiobook and wondering if anybody has read it? I haven't started yet but plan on it soon.
I’ve heard many pool players in the past recommend “The Inner Game of Tennis” for the mental side of the game. I wonder if the author got the idea from that book.
 
I just purchased this audiobook and wondering if anybody has read it? I haven't started yet but plan on it soon.
I have two of his print books. Reasonably well done, nothing remarkable. There are some errors and some things I don't agree with.
 
I’ve heard many pool players in the past recommend “The Inner Game of Tennis” for the mental side of the game. I wonder if the author got the idea from that book.
I have "The Inner Game of Tennis", "A Mind for Pool", "The Pleasures of Small Motions" "I Came to Win" by the Monk and others. I never got a lot out of any of them. Psychobabble. The best way to focus is to gamble at slightly above whatever your comfort level is or play tournaments against good opponents. And know your limits. Or simply accept this pastime as a game and don't give it a thought. After 50 plus years of pool, I know where I am on the pecking order. And it is on the lower end. Not interested in sleeping in my car like some I have known over the years.
 
Obviously finding a great stroke mechanic instructor is the number one way to
Improve that part of anyone’s game. Few of those people exist here in America. If you can afford one and find one for sure the fastest way to improve.
35 years ago I took lessons from some of the highest ball runners in this country. None of those three great players addressed what I now know to have been a really poor stroke. They just had no awareness of stroke mechanics from a teaching standpoint.
They used words like “ let the stick do the work” Perhaps today some are more in tune as to how to verbally explain proper mechanics - like Mark Wilson does in his book.
 
I liked "the science of pocket billiards" Jack. E. Koehler. Also Byrnes books are good.
I liked it also, but I've had a top instructor years ago say there's some errors in it. I haven't read it in over 20 years so I just might have to read it again.
 
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