Bookworm Bridge Conundrums #101

Published 
March 13, 2026

This conundrum was written by John Carruthers and was originally published in the book, Bridge with Another Perfect Partner - you can find out all about it further down the page.

“What rotten luck,” I moaned to Selby. “Neither clubs nor diamonds broke for me.”

“You had all the luck you needed,” he replied. “Look…” He diagrammed the deal.

Dealer East, NS vulnerable

“West made the expert lead of the king of hearts. You could not duck to retain a dummy entry in case West shifted to spades. East discarded an encouraging eight of spades. At that point, how many spades did you place with East?

About the book

Bridge with a Perfect Partner, by P. F. Saunders, was published in 1976. Many read and delighted in Saunders’ articles in Bridge Magazine (UK), and Saunders’ character Wilson, according to the flyleaf of the book, is “…an austere character, whose scholarly discourses are enlivened by frequent flashes of mordant wit.” The anonymous narrator comments, “He is very kind in explaining, when I go down in a contract, just how I could have made it and, when he goes down, just how my bidding misled him.” We’ve all played with partners like that, though few of them have had Wilson’s devastating, articulate wit.
In this sequel, John Carruthers, one of the world’s top bridge journalists,takes the reader through a brilliant series of deals, collected from tournaments all over the world. The style is highly reminiscent of Saunders’ original and will give its readers just as much pleasure.

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