On 2 nov, 17:18, Taylor Kingston wrote:
On Nov 2, 11:42 am, "Folkert van Heusden"
wrote:
Hi,
Apart from the basicchess-rules, are there also books (or even websites)
that teach as much as possiblechessnice-to-knows?
E.g.: it's good if a knight attacks weak pawns, or a rook on an open file is
good. Stuff like that.
Thanks in advance!
It sounds like you're a newcomer to the game - your question is a
bit like asking if there are any sand grains in the Sahara Desert!
There have probably been more books written aboutchessthan all other
games combined, andchess-related web-sites are legion, so the problem
is not finding books or web-sites, but finding good ones.
A good web-site iswww.chesscafe.com, which has many instructive
columns (for you I would recommend Dan Heisman's Novice Nook),. and
also links to the U.S.ChessFederation catalog of books, DVDs and
other instructional material.
One book in particular I always recommend: "LogicalChess: Move by
Move" by Irving Chernev (http://uscfsales.com/item.asp?PID=239).
Have fun discoveringchess!
http://chessteacher.110mb.com/ contains a lot of chess lessons
especially when you look in the lessons section