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Old April 11th 07, 10:34 AM posted to rec.games.chess.misc
Matt
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Posts: 8
Default Advice for beginner


"David Richerby" wrote in message
...
Michael Steen wrote:
David Richerby wrote:
The first thing to sort out is tactics. Reinfeld's books of
problems (1001 checkmates and 1001 sacrifices and combinations) are
a good place to start. [...]


I wouldn't START with Reinfeld's books. Though they are the classics
for combinations, they can be maddeningly difficult, and you never
know whether you're staring at a mate in two or in eight!


To some extent, I feel that this is an advantage. In real life, you
don't even have an angel sitting on your shoulder saying ``There's a
forced mate here'', let alone, ``There's a mate in three!'' On the
other hand, I appreciate that it can be a bit frustrating when an easy
mate in one or two is followed by a subtle mate in eight with lots of
variations to consider.

The checkmates book is rather easier than the combinations book, I
think, but I've only looked at the first chapter of the checkmates.


If you want a great beginner and intermediate and master book of
brain-teasers, get "Chess: 5334 Problems, Combinations, and Games"
by Polgar.


I've not looked at that book but, as I recall, most of the positions
are composed. Most of the point of tactics problems is pattern
recognition so I think it's important that the positions you work on
come from real games. Reinfeld's positions are from real games.


Dave.

I have both the large Polgar book and the Reinfeld 1001 Winning Chess
Sacrifices and Combinations. They are both excellent books.

I like the large number of problems from the Polgar book which ramp up in
difficulty. But I really like the quality of the Reinfeld ones, for instance
when working with an example of a pin, it does not show a simple method for
using a pin, but what you do *after* you have a pin established. You go
beyond the pin to apply visualization and calculation to a greater depth. I
am very happy to have finally gotten my hands on this book. Yes, the
Reinfeld book is harder, but that is a good thing. It covers a lot of great
tactical devices.
-Matt


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