Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Rolette", sorted by average review score:

Basics Of Winning Roulette
Published in Paperback by Cardoza Pub (November, 1998)
Average review score: 

Inconsonant Description of How to Play Roulette
The Julian Strategies in Roulette
Published in Paperback by Paone Pr (September, 1992)
Average review score: 

Good as an intro to roulette for beginners only.Do not buy this book if you are looking for a set of guaranteed strategies for winning roulette. The author tells the beginner how the game works and describes a series of well-known betting strategies. As the author himself points out, none of the strategies are expected to win after any significant length of playing time.

American Roulette Tracker
Published in Paperback by Sereken Associates (01 October, 1998)
Average review score: 

An Unfounded 4 Page Roulette System Printed in 110 PagesThis must be the first 110 page book I've read in under 5 minutes, and no I'm not a speed reader. The typesetter for this book had a very easy time: type 2 pages, then cut, and paste 38 times! Everything in this book could be written in 4 pages! (And that includes the title page!) Can we say "table needed"? After the "cut-and-paste", the remaining pages brag about web-search-engine position for the author's website and give tips like "Look for a jolly dealer". Duh?
As for the supposed "winning system", there is absolutely no mathematical reasoning or logic for the number choices given. There is no even distribution for the sequences. The numbers have every appearence of being randomly generated numbers, created from a very poor random-number generator. For roulette players in Europe and other places where single-zero wheels are used, forget this book entirely as the system applies only to double-zero wheels. And, for players here in America stuck with a double-zero wheel, you'd probably do just as well to randomly pick your own groups of numbers to use in betting progressions -- I doubt you'd do any worse.

The Infallible Roulette System
Published in Paperback by (September, 2001)
Average review score: 

The Infallible Roulette System(...) What a load of garbage. Save your money for the gambling table and find a free copy of this rubbish on the net.

Insider's Secrets for Winning at Roulette: Tips, Techniques & Strategies for Beating the Casinos at Their Own Game
Published in Paperback by Las Vegas Insider (February, 1997)
Average review score: 

32 pages of very basic informationThis book has 32 pages of basic information about the game of roulette. 80% of the book explains the rules of the game.

So You Want to Be a Gambler: Advanced Roulette (So You Wanna Be a Gambler Series)
Published in Paperback by John Patrick Productions (June, 1997)
Average review score: 

exactly the same book as "John Patrick roulette"This books explains a lot progressions and money management in roulette, but none of the strategies in this book will give you and edge over the house. It's for recreational players only, who want to have fun only.

All About Roulette
Published in Paperback by Perigee (June, 1985)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

American Roulette : How I Turned the Odds Upside Down---My Wild Twenty-Five-Year Ride Ripping Off the World's Casinos
Published in Hardcover by Thomas Dunne Books (September, 2003)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

American Roulette.
Published in Paperback by Dramatist's Play Service (December, 1969)
Average review score:
No reviews found.

American Roulette: The History and Dilemma of the Vice Presidency
Published in Paperback by Viking Press (October, 1974)
Average review score:
No reviews found.
The description of how to play occupies a good 60% of the book, but numerous typographical errors, and worse yet, technical errors plague this description. For example, the five-number bet illustrated on page 21 isn't the correct five-number bet at all, but rather is a three-number bet on 0-2-00. This is real confusing for the first time roulette player, which is the only real target audience for this book.
In addition to technical errors and typographicals, there are many out-right contradictions. For example, on page 40 we read "What they don't know is that there is no law of averages.". On page 43, we read "... as we have shown, the game is one of pure chance governed by the law of averages...".
Only one common winning system is mentioned, the Martingale, and then the author turns around and says that it really isn't a good system because of losing streaks and suggests just "playing numbers". Why did the author not chose a "good system" and explain mathematically why it is a good system? Or is he trying to say that no such system exists and that the only way to win is not to play?
For those looking to learn to play roulette and then extend their knowledge to include a good description of some of the common winning systems, I'd have to suggest "All About Roulette" by John Gollehon and "Secrets of Winning Roulette" by Marten Jensen, rather than this book.