![]() Deluxe Wood Chess Set $29.99 A wood chess set is pretty much a wood chess set at this price, but this is a great bargain. I like it because it fits well in the hands of both children and adults. You wouldn't use it for a tournament, but for practice or a pick up game it's just fine. ![]() The Complete Idiot's Guide to Chess, Third Edition $18.95 The last line of the first chapter states, "Anyone can easily learn how to play chess, and this book teaches you how." The Idiot's Guide to Chess is designed to take anyone from zero to competitive in easy steps. On reaching 40, I realized that I could no longer compete in physically exerting sports and started looking for other interests, especially something I could share with my young son. Chess took my fascination. And so started my search for a book that can go beyond explaining the rules to demystifying the first and most important elements of tactics and strategy. If someone was looking for a book that could take any ordinary Joe off the street and prepare them for competition, this would be the book I recommend. Or at least, it would be a good place to start. For probably no one book could take you there. Chess is so profound that to properly understand it, you need the input and advice of several people and much thought and practice. The strengths of this book are: * It's thoroughness. With over 400 pages, it will eventually hit on every question a beginner through to an up and coming or intermediate player would ever ask. It also contains interesting anecdotes, history, and asides. * Well organized. 21 chapters covering the range of subjects such as rules, history, tactical motives, weak squares, computers, etc. It is a good reference book. You can skip certain sections if desired, such as the rules if you already know them, and look into your areas of interest. * User friendly. Plenty of diagrams; plenty of chess puzzles to test you and stretch your understanding; a language that is patient and easy to follow without talking down to you. In other words, it is everything that the legendary Capablanca's `Fundamentals' is not. So if you are already chess minded, Capa's book is more compact and might get you there quicker. But it is dry and hard work to plough through. The Idiot's guide is the book I'd recommend for mere mortals. Some weaknesses of the book: * More effort could have been put into putting diagrams and their explanations to which they refer on the same page. * There are no complete games to work through. * Some chapters might leave you wanting more (this might not be such a bad thing). I found the chapter on openings useful but not satisfying. This may be why I see that the Idiot's Guide series has come up with a book specifically for chess openings. ![]() Classic Wood Chess Set $19.99 Classic Wood Chess Set I bought this as a gift and I couldn't be more pleased. I couldn't believe that you could get a quality hand carved chess set with an inlaid wooden board that is also used as a storage box with clasp for the price I paid[...]. Highly recommended as a gift for your budding chess master. Gunner July, 2008 ![]() Practical Chess Exercises: 600 Lessons from Tactics to Strategy $17.95 If I could give the print version of this book 6 stars, I would. And the same goes for the Kindle version--before I downloaded the 2.3 upgrade. Now the diagrams are nothing more than little useless squares about 1/4 inch on a side at the top of the page. Until some kind of patch or repair comes out, this book is useless on an updated Kindle. |
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