STONE COLD tells the story of Denn Doyle, a high school student who discovers, quite accidentally, that he's an amazing poker player. But more than that, it's a story about growing up, the choices you make AS you grow up, and about discovering who you are for better or for worse.
But even more than that, STONE COLD is about the things we do to convince ourselves that we're not making mistakes, and how we justify the things we do as we do them. Hautman's writing here is reminiscent of Robert Cormier, who never romanticized or moralized about his characters, but just let them make their choices and deal with the consequences. Hautman's major success in this book is his amazing way of getting into the mind of a high-school student, with all the questions, heartbreak, successes, and disappointments that come with it. He also manages to put into words the FEEL of a poker game better than just about anyone else I've read.
While he's primarily known as a "YA writer," (probably because his most well-known novel was GODLESS, which won the National Book Award in 2004), Hautman's really just a great WRITER. (He has written some novels for adults -- RAG MAN won an award from the WLA in 2002 -- but he'll probably always be known as the guy who wrote GODLESS, just like Robert Cormier will always be the guy who wrote THE CHOCOLATE WAR, even though he wrote several other fabulous novels.)
This book shows why Hautman deserves to be read by younger audiences and adults -- he crafts a good story, makes you think, and you can't ask for much more than that.
Highly recommended.