cover image Lay the Favorite: A Memoir of Gambling

Lay the Favorite: A Memoir of Gambling

Beth Raymer, Spiegel & Grau, $25 (240p) ISBN 978-0-385-52645-6

It’s hard not to like the breezy, ingenuous voice of this plucky protagonist who proves she’s game for any kind of new experience. Hailing from Ohio, Raymer eventually made her way to Las Vegas when she was 24 and found a lucrative position assisting a Queens-born, Stuyvesant High School-educated gambling operator, Dink Heimowitz. The lovable, irascible, big-bellied Dinky had shucked life as a bookmaker back in New York, having run into trouble, for professional sports gambling; he put Raymer and the other motley staff on the phones setting up bets for all kinds of sports matchups (baseball, football, horse racing, hockey) in order to “find a line that gave him an edge.” Dinky referred Raymer to a high-flying bookie on Long Island, Bernard Rose, who had his own offshore network. As “girl Friday” Raymer fetched doughnuts, placed calls, and acted as a runner, making wads of dough, but mostly Raymer cherished working among the assortment of gambling types, the low-end hustlers and misfits she chronicles with evident tenderness. (June)