By John Nunn
Beginning with the very fundamentals, this publication tells you every thing you must understand to turn into a winning chess-player. No earlier wisdom is thought. The reader learns the strikes and simple method, step by step, with every one new aspect illustrated through transparent examples.
Read or Download Learn Chess PDF
Similar chess books
Fifty eight two-move difficulties, forty six three-movers, and 8 four-movers composed over the last 30 years and illustrative of the simplest paintings of 27 striking American challenge composers. the writer has integrated sensible feedback for fixing each one challenge, an evidence of universal phrases and an exhaustive index.
Easy Guide to the Nge2 King's Indian
The King's Indian turns out to offer White with a vintage ''man or mouse'' determination - take Black on in a single of the severe major strains, or keep away from the difficulty with an harmless sideline. while you're bored with maintaining thus far with speedily altering main-line conception, yet don't need to squeak your method throughout the commencing, the Hungarian assault deals a truly welcome ''third way''.
Survival Guide for Chess Parents (Everyman Chess)
In Survival consultant for Chess mom and dad, Tanya Jones concentrates at the a variety of elements of being a "chess father or mother" and solutions the numerous questions dealing with people with chess-playing young children. there is definitely extra to this than meets the attention. difficulties are as varied as 'How am i able to assist in the very early levels?
- Opening for White according to Anand 1.e4, Volume 6 (Repertoire Books)
- Storming the Barricades
- Chess: The Art of Logical Thinking: From the First Move to the Last
- The Scotch Game Explained
- Chess kaleidoscope
- Comprehensive Chess Course, Vol. 1: Learn Chess in 12 Lessons
Extra info for Learn Chess
Example text
30 :lxc7 �xc7 3 1 bxc4 1Wxc4 32 �e3 Black is doing quite well) 26 axbS axbS 27 cS! eS (if 27 ... gS! is winning, viz. 32 . . d7 [if 32 ... IxeS+ 1:xe8 34 d7; or 32 . faS (28 . xg2?! ff7) 29 Wh2 b4 30 lIxeS ! dxeS 3 1 �xeS and in bad time trouble Black quickly succumbed: 3 l . f7 3S d6 1 -0 Speel man-D. Wright, Oxford Univer sity-Cavendish 1 977. 6 ... L::abS 1 :23 20 'C'Vc2 1 :46 g6 White has no very happy long-term home for his king and hence has problems connecting his rooks; while his knights do not have any juicy squares to aim for and his light squares are weak. Black has a safe king, connected rooks and some at tractive targets to aim at - some nice light squares his knight might reach one day and a pos sible pawn push to remove the white knight from g3. We can assert that Black is better, but in order to do anything he will have to find a plan. F8 39 a4 �g8 40 ltb5! I1c4 4 1 a5 lla4 42 h4 looks easy) 39 Wg2 IId7 40 h4 �c7 41 IIf6 b5 42 h5 gxh5 43 1Ih6 IId5 44 a3! tc l 58 �xb l + and White wins. b3) Finally, there is the pas sive 33 .. tf7 35 l:8d7 l:xc4 36 llxe7+ <3;xe7 37 llbl llc7 38 l'tb6 transposing directly to variation b222 or 34 l:td7 lIxd7 35 fLxd7 lhc4 36 l:[xb7 lIa4 37 11b2 g5! with an improved version of variation b2 1 . Just one final set of varia tions. When I was wrapping this 84 International Titles International Titles 85 analysis up, I suddenly started to wonder about a move I'd completely ignored: 32 l:[fxd6.