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![]() 2." Not a classic like Vukovic, but also an excellent book is GM Jan Timman's ON THE ATTACK: THE ART OF ATTACKING CHESS ACCORDING TO THE MODERN MASTERS." |
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baddeeds 28-Jan-15, 20:17 |
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![]() "New Art of Defense in Chess" (GM Andrew Soltis) The book is at my local library, so I 've read it. It's up-to-date with modern counterattacking techniques. ------------------------------------------------- Tactics "Winning Chess Tactics" (GM Yasser Seirawan) Excellent explanation of tactics along with valuable practical tips. Follow-up to Play Winning Chess. "Back to Basics: Tactics" (NM Dan Heisman) Very practical problem set with Defensive Tactics and useful sayings similar to the website mentioned below. ------------------------------------------------- Strategy, pawn structure, piece placement, etc. "Winning Chess Strategies" (GM Yasser Seirawan) Follow-up to Winning Chess Tactics. Includes often-overlooked strategical advice. ------------------------------------------------- Thought Process and Time Management "The Improving Chess Thinker" (NM Dan Heisman) This book raised my playing strength by at least 400 rating points. ------------------------------------------------- What's a good chess book is subjective, these are just the books that helped me. Check out danheisman.home.comcast.net |
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isaiah11 04-Feb-15, 19:47 |
![]() I have those books but haven't looked at them in a while (Ok, really long while lol) Wondering if they are worth digging into for a semi-average player. |
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isaiah11 04-Feb-15, 19:48 |
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isaiah11 05-Feb-15, 18:53 |
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isaiah11 06-Feb-15, 18:29 |
![]() I've played in OTB tournaments with time controls of 40/2 and SD/1 and in some games have had to blitz out moves 30 to 40 to avoid losing on time. My opponent almost always has had significantly more time on his clock - one guy even left the board to get something to eat (tourney was in a hotel) |
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![]() It's evident that more analysis results in better moves. You only have so much time, so it's important to follow a disciplined thought process that will maximize your analytical efficiency (i.e. maximizing how much meaningful analysis you can 'fit' into your thinking time). As for using a complete checklist, about 60%-90% of moves require extensive thought. Forced moves, book moves, checkmating with a king and queen, and moves where you can't blunder easily are exceptions to using a thought process. |
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postalpeet 14-Apr-15, 21:58 |
![]() Books on Fischer's games, especially those annotated by him (1) "My 60 Memorable Games". The thing about Fischer: his annotations were about the best. Most annotators do a poor job and have more errors than the games they are reviewing. The weird thing about this book, the one translated into Russian has fewer errors than the original in English. This was verified by my Dad and commented on in Shakhmatny Bulletin (Russian: Шахматный бюллетень; Chess Bulletin). |