[chessmind] Dennis Monokroussos: An openings book for everyone?
Email subscription to blog articles
chessmind at lists.powerblogs.com
Wed Jul 11 03:29:32 EDT 2007
Posted by Dennis Monokroussos:
An openings book for everyone?
http://chessmind.powerblogs.com/posts/1184138968.shtml
Chess Opening Essentials: The Ideas & Plans Behind ALL Chess Openings
(Volume 1: The Complete 1.e4) is the title of a new book co-authored
by Stefan Djuric, Dimitri Komarov, and Claudio Pantaleoni, and I think
I like it (the book, that is)! It covers, over the course of 340 pages
(this doesn't count the table of contents, the introduction, the
index, etc.), at least a little bit about practically every line in
the 1.e4 openings. The coverage isn't what you'd find in a work like
ECO or even MCO; it's much briefer, but in exchange there's a lot of
useful verbal commentary and an incredible 385 illustrative games
(mostly unannotated).
I'll be reviewing it for [1]Chess Today soon, but my initial reaction
is that it's a book that this is a very useful book for players in the
1500-2000 range, but those outside it (on both ends) can benefit -
even a quick browse taught me a thing or two about lines outside my
normal repertoire. The book is like a cross between the wonderful but
hopelessly out of date Chess Openings: Theory and Practice by I.A.
Horowitz and the likewise out of date The Ideas Behind the Chess
Openings by Reuben Fine. Chess Opening Essentials has fewer variations
than the Horowitz book and less coverage of particular structures than
Fine's work, but as a general reference it's quite useful. Along with
Andy Soltis's Pawn Structure Chess, I think it's one of the very few
nearly indispensable works on the openings that belong in every
amateur's library.
References
1. http://www.chesstoday.net/
More information about the chessmind
mailing list