I love Las Vegas history, and I particularly love stories of how the kitschy and ridiculous aspects of Vegas culture came to be. The time period covered in "Winner Take All" offers this in spades, as it covers the era of Vegas from the fall of the mob to just before present day. In the book, you get the details of the building of and development of attractions in every major casino currently on the strip except for Cosmo and Park MGM which opened after the time frame the book covers. Essentially, "Winner Take All" is about how Vegas went from a mobbed-up den of sin to a stock market darling with a family-friendly veneer of sin.
Though I love this era in Vegas history and I find the figures who drove its development ridiculously fascinating, this book doesn't quite live up to its promise. While the stories are spectacular, and in particular, the beat to beat of high-flying casino stock deals is riveting, Binkley's story is a bit scattered. While this is a fascinating time in Vegas history, Steve Wynn and Kirk Kerkorian aren't all the interesting as CEOs go, and the rollicking tone of the strip business gets watered down by personal anecdotes that disrupt the rhythm.
I see what Binkely tried to do by anchoring this story in the lives of three very different men. But, it just doesn't always hang together. The stories about the casinos themselves, and in particular the family-friendly but hard-nosed practicality of Harrah's vs. the sexy fantasy of Wynn's casinos, are great. But, the book itself is a bit unwieldy and unfocused.
Despite the imperfect writing, if you are as interested in the recent history of Las Vegas as I am, this book should click for you. But, if the subject matter doesn't jump out at you, this won't change that.
But, if you want to learn about the history of Vegas and the (mostly) men who drove it from the Luxor to the Bellagio, this is the book for you!