Home :: Books :: Entertainment  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment

Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Instructive Modern Chess Masterpieces

Instructive Modern Chess Masterpieces

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.47
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Best book available for Class A & above!
Review: Bombadillo's review is spot-on: Stohl puts incredible amounts of computer-assisted work into each game, then synthezises his findings on these beautiful & difficult games in a way that reasonably strong players can understand.

Not an easy book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great, modern {chess} masterpiece.
Review: I first studied this book with a student of mine just after it was published. He purchased it, we would go over a game or two every lesson or so. Then last November, (2003); I purchased my own copy of this book. I can safely say that I have had this book long enough, and also spent enough time studying it - to do a reasonably intelligent review. (I have also chatted with many friends and students who have purchased this book, as well as having received about 10-20 e-mails as concerning this volume.)

First of all, the book is from "Gambit" Books ... suffice it to say that they have many fine chess books in their line and know exactly how to do a good job publishing a chess book. (Paper, binding, editing, etc.)

Secondly, this comes from a reasonably strong GM ... who is also a chess teacher and an author.

Thirdly, we have the collection. 50 games of recent vintage - no dinosaurs in here. The games are extremely well annotated; sometimes there is a comment after every move during the key part of a game. The emphasis here is on the opening and on tactics, but no phase of the game is neglected. The work here is VERY detailed, as a USCF Master, I found it both entertaining and challenging.

I gladly give this book five stars, even though I had said in the past I would not do this anymore.

There are some slight drawbacks to the book. I would not call them flaws, but I feel it my responsibility to point out a few possible stumbling blocks to a potential buyer.
1. The book is best tackled by someone who is at least 1400-to-1500 in rating. I am quite sure a rank beginner would find this book much too complex and difficult to grasp. (The author could still learn a turn or two from the great Irving Chernev!)
2. I found a few tactical flaws, but to be honest, it took hours and hours to find them using Fritz 8.0. I doubt that even a good 1800 player would notice these if they were not using a very strong chess program.
3. I personally found a few of the variants hard to follow. I also had difficulty assessing a few of the positions. I am sure that the average player would feel the same way, perhaps even a little lost. This could have been resolved by ending each variation with a symbol that stands for which side stands better - and perhaps a brief note explaining why.

And while this might be a very tough and seemingly dense book, I would issue the following challenge. Buy this book, go over all the games and study it in depth. (Take at least a month.) Then every time you go up about 100 points review this book. I am willing to bet this is a book that you would continue to benefit from until your rating has surpassed the authors. (I looked up GM Igor Stohl's rating - ID # 14900025 on the FIDE website ... he is currently rated 2561.)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An advanced and inspirational learning tool
Review: I have recently started to work with this book and it is very useful. When you have the basics in place and do not need a lot of verbal explanation move by move to guide you - buy this one! I guess it is suited for people with rating at least 1800+. I returned to chess two years ago after 15 years of absence and my rating is now c2100 ICC Standard.

Reading the book the normal way would no doubt be interesting, but I use it and think it is best suited for playing solitaire chess. This kind of training is time-consuming but, apart from playing and analysing your own games, it is the best way to improve your actual game and find your weaknesses. There are no quick fixes when you have reached a certain level of play.

The idea is simulate an actual game, taking the side on one player and try to find the best moves. You can work with a clock or just take the time you need. The best way to start is to look at the contents page and then get the moves of the game from a database, in order not to be biased by Stohl's exclamation- or question-marks.

Skip the first 8 moves or so, then cover up the rest of the game. Write down your analysis of crucial variations or at least the moves you think will take place three moves ahead (two by you and one by your opponent). In "key positions" you might want to write down verbally your general observations/evaluations or break down the position in different factors. When ready, uncover the move actually played, the move by your opponent and then continue. If you got all your moves right (my sad experience is that it is not very likely) you can pat yourself on the back and say that you have beaten a world-class player!

When ready with the whole game you should ideally make you own analysis and maybe process the game through a computer program, but only after you have made your own mind up. It is only at this stage that you open the book and compare your notes with Stohl's. Then ask yourself - what kind of (good) moves did I miss and why?

This book is great and the large number of variations and suggestions for improvements in world-class games only make the book more attractive. It demonstrates that chess is a profound and beautiful game.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Another games collection
Review: This book collects games between 1993-2000. The analysis shows all that might have happened 5 moves ahead if different moves were chosen- it doesnt really analyze the actual game- its a forum to show you what might have happened had the players made other choices- its useless as a learning tool. After reading a few games I shelved this monster.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Chess Book of the Year
Review: This book comprises fifty top-flight GM games played over a seven-year period, starting with Gelfand-Dreev Tilburg 1993 and culminating with Anand-Khalifman Shenyang 2000. The games are chronologically ordered and indexed by both player and opening. The notes to each game end with a summary that encapsulates the key moments of the game and provides a verbal summary of the main themes.

If I could give "Instructive Modern Chess Masterpieces" six stars I would do so. It joins the pantheon of well-annotated game collections such as Nunn's "Secrets of Grandmaster Chess", Nunn's "Understanding Chess Move by Move" and Timman's "The Art of Chess Analysis". The quality of analysis and explanation to be found is at least equal to that found in these other books.

The book has been written for accomplished players. It is at least one step beyond Nunn's "Understanding Chess Move by Move". Whereas the style of Nunn's book is reminiscent of a patient teacher painstakingly explaining the basics, that of Stohl is of a senior and erudite master expounding high-level ideas at a seminar for junior colleagues.

I particularly liked the discussion of opening theory, where Stohl entertainingly describes the evolution of ideas. A few words from him can often shed light on an entire system. The discussion of current GM understanding of openings is unparalleled and backed up by references to games that have brought about shifts in opinion and sentiment. Of course, the analysis and explanation of other phases of the games is equally outstanding.

As Stohl suggests, one should have not only board and pieces but also a chess-playing program and database when reading the book. His analysis should be tested. And one may have unanswered questions. GM games seldom exist in isolation; they tend to provide a snapshot of chess culture at a particular moment. The games reflect understanding of the pool of chess knowledge, which grows with the passing of time, and they make their own modest contribution to this body. Stohl frequently refers to other games past and present, and to other opening ideas and middlegame strategies that can be looked up in a database.

In summary: the kind of book the Dvoretsky school would adopt for training purposes.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: May be THE classic of this era
Review: To play through one game is to get an education. The annotations are heavy on ideas, and variations too, but somehow it all seems as if every line is essential, like nothing is a dump. These analyses are alive with action and instruction. This book is a towering achievement.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates