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ChessBookForum
Member since Apr-18-09 · Last seen Aug-17-21
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   ChessBookForum has kibitzed 277 times to chessgames   [more...]
   Jul-30-21 jessicafischerqueen chessforum (replies)
 
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   Dec-12-15 ChessBookForum chessforum (replies)
 
ChessBookForum: <parisattack> Good news! <Dan> put us as the second item on the "What's New" list on the front page. I added your name to our forum, and also Boomie's, which was missing. That's because we haven't edited the dang thing since <Howard> shelled out the first ...
 
   Dec-12-15 chessgames.com chessforum (replies)
 
ChessBookForum: Thanks so much from all of us! <What's New On December 10th, 2015, Chessgames turned 14 years old! Help us celebrate by participating in our annual Holiday Present Hunt, which will begin during the round 6 broadcast of the London Chess Classic. 64 prizes will be ...
 
   Jun-04-15 wordfunph chessforum (replies)
 
ChessBookForum: Brother <wordfunph> our forum is back and has been made permanent by the webmaster!
 
   Feb-21-11 Travis Bickle chessforum (replies)
 
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   Feb-21-11 Penguincw chessforum (replies)
 
ChessBookForum: Hello <Penguin>. That better not be s picture of a "Penguin Burger". You don't want to get in trouble with Animal Rights Activists!
 
   Feb-21-11 Kibitzer's Café (replies)
 
ChessBookForum: Here are a few Chess History suggestions: 1. Al Horowitz <From Morphy to Fischer - a History of the World Chess Championship> http://www.amazon.com/Morphy-Fische... This volume includes behind the scenes historical details about how every world championship match was ...
 
   Feb-21-11 kingscrusher chessforum (replies)
 
ChessBookForum: Hello <Tryfon> it's me- Jess. I've put on the ChessBookForum hat so as to kill two birds with one stone. Here are a few Chess History suggestions from my library: 1. Al Horowitz <From Morphy to Fischer - a History of the World Chess Championship> ...
 
   Feb-21-11 crawfb5 chessforum (replies)
 
ChessBookForum: Hello. Is this where I enter my moves for the <Battle of the Bahrains>?
 
   Nov-01-10 jessicafischerqueen chessforum (replies)
 
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ChessBookForum

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 48 OF 77 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jan-31-12  parisattack: It reminds me of a story of mine from college. I needed some quick cash, sold my Congress set to a local bookseller, Don Bloch. Hated to part with them but it was a pressing issue.

About a month later I went to the bookstore on the chance that I might be able to buy them back...alas, I went to the chess book section and they were gone! :(

As I walked back to the front Mr Bloch pulled the books out from behind the counter, smiled, sold them back to me at what he paid. I never let them out of my sight again - and always remember the kindness of Don Bloch.

Jan-31-12  TheFocus: <parisattack> You, too, have Friends in High Places.
Jan-31-12  wordfunph: <parisattack> nice story.
Feb-01-12  parisattack: <TheFocus> ! :) I am sure you are correct; he was a fine fellow, gentleman and a scholar. Must have been related to you, my friend!
Feb-01-12  parisattack: Queen's Gambit Accepted books. Might anyone add to the list, please? An opening a bit under the cloud. I do note a few games recently with the odd Winawer Variation where black was OK: 1. d4, d5; 2. c4, cd:, 3. Nf3, Nf6; 4. e3, Be6?!

Buckley - Easy Guide to the Queen's Gambit Accepted
Chess Stars - Queen's Gambit Accepted
Flear - New Ideas in the Queen's Gambit Accepted
Gufeld - Queen's Gambit Accepted
Hooper - A Complete Defense to 1. d4
Massino - Queen's Gambit Accepted
Neistahdt - Queen's Gambit Accepted
Raetsky - Starting Out: Queen's Gambit Accepted
Rizzitano - How to Beat 1. d4
Sakeav - Queen's Gambit Accepted
Schwarz - Das Angenommene Damengambit
Schiller - Queen's Gambit Accepted: Smyslov Variation

Smith/Hall - Queen's Gambit Accepted
Trends - Queen's Gambit Accepted I (Martin), II (Baburin)

Varnusz - Queen's Gambit Accepted I, II
Ward - Queen's Gambit Accepted
Watson - 4. Nc3 in the Queen's Gambit Accepted

Feb-02-12  Mozart72: Hi parisattack. Got two questions for you. How do you know with precision or accuracy when the opening game ends (of course, in chess) and the middle game begins? How do you know with precision or accuracy when the middle game ends and the endgame begins?
Feb-03-12  parisattack: <Mozart72: Hi parisattack. Got two questions for you. How do you know with precision or accuracy when the opening game ends (of course, in chess) and the middle game begins? How do you know with precision or accuracy when the middle game ends and the endgame begins?>

Hello, <Mozart72> Long time, no hear!

I think it is similar to deciding where the leg ends and the foot begins - you'll know when you're there. From another perspective - 'opening' and 'middle game' and 'end game'are artificial semantic constructs so there really isn't a precise reality to them for such measurement. They are just useful for communication, per Wittgenstein.

Feb-04-12  parisattack: If hypermodernism is your thing - it has been mine since my chess get-go here's an inspiring little book:

Winning with the Hyper-Modern, Keene & Schiller, Owl Books 1994. This was part of the 'Winning With' opening series (most of them still worthy tomes) but is different in that it doesn't cover a single opening.

Rather it is a tour and history of hypermodernism focused on openings - English, Reti, Nimzo-Indian, Grunfeld, Budapest, King's Indian, Alekhine, Larsen Attack (here, 1. g3). Enjoyable, instructive read.

Feb-05-12  cormier: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/18... 1...d6
Feb-06-12  parisattack: <cormier: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/18... 1...d6>

Thanks, I'll bite. I like repertoire books.

Quite a few on 1. ...e6 (French/Dutch, Barcza-Larsen-Franco Benoni), 1. ...d6 (Philidor/Lion/Czech/Old Indian), 1... b6, 1. ...g6, 1. ...c6, 1... Nc6 (Nimzovitch/Chigorin/Tango).

Feb-09-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  kamalakanta: Hi! I have a question....thinking about the Queen's Gambit Declined, and the endings that arise from it...

Is there any book out there that concentrates on the endings arising from different openings?

Thanks!

Feb-09-12  DoctorD: For kamalakanta:

Mastering the Endgame by Shereshevsky and Slutsky (2 volumes). From the back:

"The connection between opening and endgame is a topic that has been hardly covered before in chess literature. By analysing a selection of classic and modern games, the authors explain how to play the typical endings arising from different openings."

Volume 2 covers the Queen's Gambit.

Feb-09-12  hms123: <kamalakanta> This isn't exactly what you asked about, but it may be worth your while. Sokolov's <Winning Chess Middlegames: An Essential Guide to Pawn Structures > is quite good. It focuses on pawn structures so it is relevant to the ending.

http://www.amazon.com/Winning-Chess...

Feb-09-12  wordfunph: ChessBookForum Tea Time!

Invisible Chess Moves --- Book of the Year Award for 2011 at the Chess Cafe..

<"After several weeks of voting, one book stood out as the runaway winner. In previous years the voting has been close round-by-round, or one book will do well in the first round, but falter in the second. This year players (predominately from France, Israel, and The Netherlands) rallied overwhelmingly around just this one title.">

http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp...

book-hunting begins now.

Feb-10-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  kamalakanta: Thank you, Doctor D and hms123. I will look into those.
Feb-12-12  wordfunph: for your eyes only..

http://www.flickr.com/photos/adamra...

Feb-17-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  kamalakanta: Hi, everyone! I just got Shereshevsky's Vol.2 of "Mastering the Endgame"...I travel to Iceland tomorrow to train a bit and then play on March 2nd and 3rd in the Icelandic Chess Club Team Championship (A friend invited me to play for the Reykjavik Chess Club)...and I'll probably get whipped in every game....haven't played much OTB chess in the last 30 years!

Anyhow, the book is excellent...well organized and easy to read. Recommended...it cost me an arm and a leg (over $50, but I really wanted it!), so if you are at the tournament in Iceland and you see a brown man limping, its me!

Another book I am enjoying is GM Neil McDonald's "Chess Success: Planning After the Opening"..it is rife with great examples of excellent play.

Oh, well...best of luck to you all and thanks for keeping this forum alive!

Feb-18-12  hms123: <kamalakanta>

Best of luck in Iceland.

Feb-18-12
Premium Chessgames Member
  kamalakanta: Thanks, hms123....I am definitely taking Lasker's games with me for inspiration.

The players that inspire me the most right now are (in no particular order)...Lasker, Capablacna, Alekhine, Rubinstein, Bronstein, Smyslov, Tal, Tartakower, Kramnik, Anand, Ivanchuk.

Feb-18-12  elric: Hi there
Im looking for a book on the French Tarrasch from white's point of view. I'm looking for an instructional book rather than a reference book. I've looked at Pederson and Psarkis but these have too much detail. I'm a club player rated about 1500.
Any suggestions.
Feb-18-12  pulsar: <elric> How To Beat the French Defence by Andreas Tzermiadianos (Everyman, 2008) is devoted to the French Tarrasch. It's quite advanced but you might still find it helpful as General Themes are covered on the first part of the book.
Feb-18-12  elric: Thanks, I will certainly look at that.
Mar-05-12  elric: I thought I'd found a really good blog, but no one seems to be using it. Such interesting views about chess books.
Has anyone got any comments to make ?
Mar-05-12  hms123: <elric> This isn't really a blog, but more a place to post questions and answers, reviews of books you like or dislike, or anything that would be of interest to those who like chess books. Usually, if someone posts a question (as you did about the French) then you usually get an answer from someone--maybe even from you. You can also use search kibitzing to find older reviews and info on previous pages.

btw, you might consider Yevseev's <Fighting the French: A new concept> although it is not for beginners.

<A QUICK REVIEW OF DENIS YEVSEEV'S _FIGHTING THE FRENCH_ SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2011 AT 12:02AM Denis Yevseev, Fighting the French: A New Concept (Chess Stars 2011). 384 pp. Reviewed by Dennis Monokroussos.

A new concept, really? The idea promoted by GM Denis Yevseev isn't his invention and goes back at least a couple of decades, so it isn't brand new. I'll bet, though, that it'll be new to most of your opponents. It was new to me, and in the experimenting I've done with it the last couple of weeks it seems new to my opponents as well, even ones with titles attached to their names (and internet aliases).

What is it? It's the so-called “universal system”: the Tarrasch with Ngf3, Bd3, c3 and 0-0 against most (but not all) Black setups. By itself, that isn't new – Korchnoi's gambit of the pawn on d4 goes back many decades. The new idea is not the pawn sac, but to preserve an isolated pawn on d4. In so doing, the game often transposes to positions from other openings where the IQP (isolated d [“queen's”] pawn) is standard: the Panov-Botvinnik System against the Caro-Kann, the Rubinstein Variation of the Nimzo-Indian, the Queen's Gambit Accepted and the 2.c3 Sicilian. The irony is that the new concept isn't new per se, but is new to the French, and that's almost as good. For those of us who aren't professionals, our opponents are unlikely to have much experience playing a position that doesn't normally come from the French but the Caro-Kann or Sicilian, so as long as we can develop a good feel for playing with the IQP, it's a good choice.

Now for details. The book comprises three parts, the first two of which are relatively conventional. Part 1 (chapters 1-3) covers Rubinstein's 3...dxe4, while part 2 (chapters 4-9) is a hodgepodge of Tarrasch sidelines and normal lines where White should avoid the IQP approach. Finally, part 3 (comprising the oddly-numbered chapters “i1” through “i7”) treats different versions of the IQP arising from the 3...Nf6, 3...c5 and 3...a6 lines. (Also through 3...Be7 lines, though that move order isn't given in the table of contents.)

As is often the case for Chess Stars opening books, the chapters are often divided into three sections: “Quick Repertoire”, “Step by Step” and “Complete Games”. The first section generally gives the main line and highlights relevant themes, while the second provides all the little variational details along the way. The last, “Complete Games”, is of course just what it sounds like. All the chapters in the first two sections follow this template, while the IQP chapters of part 3 dispense with the “Quick Repertoire”.

Some specifics: as mentioned earlier, the same lines sometimes lead to an IQP treatment and sometimes not. For instance, after 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nd2 Be7 4.Ngf3 Nf6 5.Bd3 c5 6.c3 Nc6 7.0-0 Black has a choice. He can swap the center pawns with 7...cxd4 8.cxd4 dxe4 9.Nxe4 0-0 or 9...Nxe4 10.Bxe4 0-0, with a position covered in part 3. but he can also choose to wait with 7...0-0. Here White doesn't have any fantastic waiting or building move, so he should push with 8.e5. Further, Black's last move is a little committal, taking away ...g5 options, so White's timing has positive value as well. The details are different, but after 3...Nf6 4.Bd3 c5 5.c3 Nc6 6.Ngf3 cxd4 7.cxd4 Qb6 8.0-0 Be7 White once again can't afford to wait around waiting for some sort of isolated d-pawn position, and should force the play with 9.e5 Nd7 10.Nb3.

There are plenty of positions where the IQP does arise, however, and if you look up the Plaskett-Short game I covered last week (or better yet, watch the video), you'll see what it looks like and how it can work. It's not a refutation of the French, and I'm sure that Black can equalize in some of the lines (indeed, Yevseev himself doesn't claim that White obtains an edge in every variation). But for its freshness, and because it avoids the kinds of typical French pawn structures its advocates know and love and many white players hate, it may be worth your while to have a look. Recommended.

Ordering info and a pdf sample (conveniently including the aforementioned Plaskett-Short game) are available here.>

http://www.thechessmind.net/blog/20...

Mar-06-12  elric: Many thanks for such a detailed response. Looks like I will need to really understand playing with an IQP.
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