Best of
Chess

1994

Chess: 5334 Problems, Combinations and Games


László Polgár - 1994
    Organized by problem type, each combination, or game is keyed to an easy-to-follow solution at the back of the book.. More than 6,000 illustrations make it easy to see the possibilities regardless of where your pieces are on the board. The book also includes the basic rules of the game and an international bibliography. Chess is the ultimate book on winning the game.

Chess Mysteries of Sherlock Holmes: Fifty Tantalizing Problems of Chess Detection


Raymond M. Smullyan - 1994
    The progressively more difficult puzzles include a double murder.

Winning Chess Strategies


Yasser Seirawan - 1994
    A complete overview of proven chess principles that teaches readers how to deploy their pieces using the right moves at the right time to build small advantages into effective, long-range strategies.

Attack with Mikhail Tal


Mikhail Tal - 1994
    His all-out sacrificial style took him all the way to the World Championship title. Dogged by ill-health, Tal's reign was a short one, and he was never able to regain his crown, but Tal remained an outstanding player right up to his death in 1992. His departure has taken away one of the chess world's most charismatic figures; a player who excited chess passions wherever he went. In this, his last book, written together with Russian sports journalist Iakov Damsky, Tal shows how to unleash devastating attacks in all kinds of positions.

Russians Versus Fischer


Mikhail Tal - 1994
    For the first time readers will be able to view virtually all the secret documents on "the Fischer problem", many of which have never previously been published.

Best Lessons of a Chess Coach


Sunil Weeramantry - 1994
    Every truth about chess must be coached in context, and the book's interactive teacher-student dialogue does just that. Weeramantry teaches how to think during a chess game. 300 diagrams.

The Art of Combination


Maxim Blokh - 1994
    

Winning Chess Tactics for Juniors: 534 One, Two and Three Move Combinations for the Developing Chess Player


Lou Hays - 1994
    Tactical proficiency should be the first and most important goal of the developing junior and intermediate chess player. This book contains 534 diagrams with one- two- and three-move solutions along with a recommended system of study. A few weeks of dedication to these interesting and entertaining positions will provide the aspiring student with the basic tactical foundation necessary to advance to the Class "A" level and beyond.

The Life & Games of Akiva Rubinstein: Volume 1: Uncrowned King


John Donaldson - 1994
    One of the greatest artists ever to sit down at a chessboard, Rubinstein was also the strongest player never to get a shot at the title of World Champion. The Life & Games of Akiva Rubinstein, Volume 1: Uncrowned King focuses on the years 1882-1920, covering Rubinstein’s rise from a modest upbringing to his emergence as Emanuel Lasker’s chief challenger in the last years leading up to World War I. It also examines the effects this conflict had on his sensitive psyche and the way it influenced his play in the post-War years. The most definitive work ever done on the first part of Rubinstein’s career, this revised and expanded edition of The Life & Games of Akiva Rubinstein, Volume 1: Uncrowned King offers almost 500 games, many of them deeply annotated with notes translated from top players of the pre-World War I era, including Lasker, Tarrasch, Schlechter and Rubinstein. The authors have also made many new annotations to the games and uncovered quite a bit of interesting material including recent discoveries on Rubinstein’s stay in Sweden after World War I. The second edition of The Life & Games of Akiva Rubinstein, Volume 1: Uncrowned King is 20 percent larger than its predecessor and with its wealth of crosstables, archival photos, multiple indexes and through bibliography it offers a treasure trove for the Rubinstein fan.

Elements of Positional Evaluation: How the Pieces Get Their Power


Dan Heisman - 1994
    They learn positional principles which often lead to inaccurate evaluations and faulty decisions about how to proceed. This groundbreaking book by best-selling chess author Dan Heisman addresses the evaluation and understanding of how static features affect the value of the pieces in a given position. Emphasis is placed on the static evaluation of each pieces value and its role in the overall position rather than the assessment of a specific position, but Heismans approach can also be applied to help evaluate entire positions by helping to answer the questions who stands better, by how much, and why?

A Legend on the Road: Bobby Fischer's 1964 Simultaneous Exhibition Tour


John Donaldson - 1994
    Championships to his credit -- including a scintillating 11-0 in the 1963/64 affair -- but U.S. chess players had never had a real opportunity to see him in action up close. During his 1964 exhibition tour, he barnstormed the U.S. and Canada from coast to coast, and his entertaining lectures, high level of play and personable manner won him many new admirers. This is a comprehensive look at the tour with newspaper reports, magazine articles, personal reminiscences and lots of games, many of which have never been published before. This second edition features new material including a recently rediscovered exhibition in Indianapolis, first-hand accounts from San Francisco, Little Rock and Pittsburgh, several games, plus photos and artifacts as well as corrections. It's is a treasure trove for every Fischer fan.

Mastering The Spanish: With the Read and Play Method


Daniel J. King - 1994
    It leads to highly complex play, whichever variation arises. In this volume of the "Mastering" series, the authors explain, with the aid of many diagrams, the essential features of the main variations of the Spanish opening. This series organizes the subject matter according to strategic themes and, by concentrating on the essentials, the books ensure that the reader genuinely understands the underlying principles instead of merely memorizing variations.

Kasparov on the King's Indian


Garry Kasparov - 1994
    Kasparov has introduced innumerable new King's Indian ideas into tournament practice and has triumphed over many of the world's leading players.

The Big Book of Combinations


Eric Schiller - 1994
    

Frank Marshall, United States Chess Champion: A Biography with 220 Games


Andrew Soltis - 1994
    A colorful character almost always decked out in an ascot and chewing a cigar, his career coincided with many evolutionary changes in competitive chess. Marshall was a master gamesman. He took up the game of salta, akin to Chinese checkers, and was soon world champion. But more than anything, he loved chess. He claimed that after learning the game at the age of 10 he played every day for the next 57 years. Marshall's life and playing style are fully examined here, including 220 of his games (some never before published) with 190 positional diagrams.