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Kid 25's
Library Exhibits
The Thrill of the Game
Cue Sports
The Thrill of the Game
Antony and Cleopatra
(by
William Shakespeare
)
Modern Billiards
(by
Hotine, F. M. (Frederick Martin)
)
Billiards Simplified : Or, How to Make B...
The Compleat Angler ; Or, The Contemplat...
(by
Walton, Izaak
)
Hints on Billiards
(by
John Penruddocke Buchanan
)
In the semifinals of the 2017 World Pool Series,
billiards
champion Chris Melling hit a series of incredible shots to secure his place in the championship round. After curving the cue ball around the table to sink his shot, Melling scored another miraculous strike: he knocked one of his final balls in, bouncing it off all four sides of the table before it landed in a corner pocket. Billiards aficionados revere the daring, expertise, and technical skill necessary to become masters of pool and other cue sports. Author
Walter Tevis
, whose 1958 novel
The Hustler
stylized the world of
pool
for millions of readers, understood that pool and other billiard games are entrenched with a sense of fearlessness and, at times, an almost fatalist approach to winning and losing.
Cue sports (also known as billiard sports) were first played in 15th century Europe. English poet and writer
Charles Cotton
is best known for his nonfiction works,
The Compleat Gamester
(1674) and
The Compleat Angler
(1676), the former considered the standard English-language reference work for gambling games, including billiards.
While pool remains the most recognized subdivision of cue sports in North America,
carom billiards
(a French styled cue sport played on billiard tables without pockets),
snooker
, and
Russian Pyramid
(English and Russian styled games played on snooker tables with six pockets) demonstrate the truly international appeal of the sport.
Billiards has had an enduring impact on many societies since its inception.
Mary, Queen of Scots
was wrapped in her billiard table cover after her beheading. Shakespeare’s tragic
Antony and Cleopatra
famously references the sport as Cleopatra frantically exclaims “Let’s to billiards” in Act II, almost in a state of distemperment. Early American presidents George Washington,
Abraham Lincoln
, and
Theodore Roosevelt
, all headstrong political leaders, were enthusiasts of the game. Actor
Jackie Gleason
, who famously portrayed Minnesota Fats in the screen production of Tevis’ The Hustler, was also a proponent of the sport.
Martin Scorsese
’s award-winning film,
The Color of Money
(1986), featured
Paul Newman
as an aging pool hustler and his cocky apprentice played by
Tom Cruise
. That movie was also based on Tevis’ novel.
World Public Library offers an array of great references for many cue sports. F.M. Hotine’s
Modern Billiards
provides rules and regulations for an assortment of billiard games;
Billiards Simplified: Or, How to Make Breaks
offers gameplay illustrations; and J.P. Buchanan’s
Hints on Billiards
offers excellent technical insight.
By Logan Williams
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