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How Not to Play Chess

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How Not to Play Chess

Beginners and even fairly advanced players agree on one thing: analyzing the strength or weakness of a position (material being equal) is the hardest part of chess to learn. It is also one of the hardest elements to teach, and there are some who claim it is unteachable. But this wonderfully lucid book, written by one of the outstanding chess expositors of the twentieth century, presents the basis of analysis in such a disarmingly simple way that even the most casual player will be able to improve his game immensely.
Sticking to a few well-chosen examples and explaining every step along the way, the author shows you how to avoid playing a hit-or-miss game, from move to move, and instead develop general plans of action based on positional analysis: weak and strong squares, the notion of controlling a square, how to seize control of open lines, weak points in the pawn structure, and other aspects of analysis.
He includes as well a number of tips (not often found in books for beginners and average players) that the reader would do well to commit to memory: such hints as “Never omit to blockade an enemy passed pawn,” and “Do not be content with attacking an existing weakness; always seek to create others.” Throughout the book he defines and illustrates typical chess mistakes, and anyone reading his book carefully will learn in a few hours what he might otherwise have spent years to attain. For this revised edition, the author added 20 problems from master games on which the reader can test his understanding of the principles found in the text.

Reprint of the 1949 edition.
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$7.95
How Not to Play Chess—
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Beginners and even fairly advanced players agree on one thing: analyzing the strength or weakness of a position (material being equal) is the hardest part of chess to learn. It is also one of the hardest elements to teach, and there are some who claim it is unteachable. But this wonderfully lucid book, written by one of the outstanding chess expositors of the twentieth century, presents the basis of analysis in such a disarmingly simple way that even the most casual player will be able to improve his game immensely.
Sticking to a few well-chosen examples and explaining every step along the way, the author shows you how to avoid playing a hit-or-miss game, from move to move, and instead develop general plans of action based on positional analysis: weak and strong squares, the notion of controlling a square, how to seize control of open lines, weak points in the pawn structure, and other aspects of analysis.
He includes as well a number of tips (not often found in books for beginners and average players) that the reader would do well to commit to memory: such hints as “Never omit to blockade an enemy passed pawn,” and “Do not be content with attacking an existing weakness; always seek to create others.” Throughout the book he defines and illustrates typical chess mistakes, and anyone reading his book carefully will learn in a few hours what he might otherwise have spent years to attain. For this revised edition, the author added 20 problems from master games on which the reader can test his understanding of the principles found in the text.

Reprint of the 1949 edition.
chess tournaments;learning chess;chess move;learn chess;avoid mistakes;logical chess;chess openings;chess master;chess players;chess board;playing chess;chess game;french defence;level players;beginning player;novice players;black king;intermediate players;black queen;middle game;descriptive notation;algebraic notation;bobby fischer;middle level;chernev's logical;world champion;spent studying;games played;intermediate level;pattern recognition;move-by-move;capablanca;averbach;deflections;middlegame;polgar;uscf;grandmasters;positional;kasparov;checkmate;1600;endgame;chess;sicilian;skewers;amateurs;rook;forks;pins;tactical;combinations;motifs;instructive;murray;chandler;opponent;mastery;pawn;beginners;variations;tactics;strategy;positions;assumes;books on french defences;books on chess tournaments;books on middle games;books on chess boards;books on avoid mistakes;books on chess games;books on pattern recognitions;books on playing chesses;books on chandler;books on grandmasters;books on chess openings;books on bobby fischer;books on capablanca;books on learn chesses;books on black kings;books on learning chesses;books on chess masters;books on amateurs;books on world champions;books on chess players;books on black queens;books on intermediate players;begin player;books on intermediate levels;books on chess moves;books on level players;play chess;avoiding mistakes;books on middle levels;books on beginning players;books on polgar;books on move-by-moves;books on deflections
How Not to Play Chess | Dover Publications