How To Read Jacob's Books - Quality Chess Blog
How To Read Jacob's Books - Quality Chess Blog
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I get a few emails/facebook messages every week, asking questions, coming with
suggestions and so on. In general, I prefer to receive them on the blog, so my answers
can be seen by anyone who is interested, so they can work out for themselves which
direction is right for them.
A few days ago I got the following email, which is quite typical, as is my answer, even
though I went into extra detail this time around. With permission I post it here for
anyone who are interested…
Dear sir,
My name is xxx xxx, aged 1x years and my elo is 21xx. I have bought a couple of books
this month authored by you. I want to know which book should I start reading first. The
books are:
Excelling at chess
Positional play
Strategic play
Calculation
Regards,
xxx xxx
xxx, India.
My answer:
Dear xxx
First off, Inside the Chess Mind and Grandmaster vs. Amateur can be read for fun and
totally out of sequence. The same goes to some extent for Excelling at Chess, which is
mainly meant to inspire.
Excelling at Chess Calculation is the place I would start. Read it carefully. The exercises
are not that great; I could skip them.
Then move on to Calculation. The chapters are created with more and more difficult
exercises. Once you get stuck; go to the next chapter. The attitude in solving is
important. Do it like it is important!
Once you are well into Calculation, you can start working on Positional Play as well. Work
on them side by side. It does not matter which one you do most of, but do some of each.
Calculation is later replaced by Practical Chess Defence and Positional Play by Strategic
Play. Of all of these books, Calculation and Positional Play are the most important to
really understand well.
You can read Attacking Manual 1 and 2 when your solving is getting steady. (If you do an
hour a day, you will see rapid progress. Everyone who works with these books seriously
have made big progress; including in India). Attacking Manual 1 works well together with
Attack and Defence. Read AM1 and get A&D; but first go through the other books. You
can always read Attacking Manual 1 more than once. Actually, I strongly recommend it.
Excelling at Technical Chess can be read later; it works well Endgame Play, which is also
not on your list.
And please read Thinking Inside the Box when it comes out. It will tie all of the books
together.
If you go through all of these books in the way I describe, you will have more effective
training than most young chess players in the World. It is by no means easy and it
requires a lot of effort. But I think the examples are aesthetically pleasing and the process
SHOULD be fun and interesting. If it is not, please think about how you can make it more
fun. To work with a friend is often a good way. Most progress for most people come
when they are working in a group in one way or another.
I do plan on coming on a book tour of Asia in the spring, hopefully around mid-April.
The main stop will obviously be India, where I have many friends and where a lot of
people have expressed appreciation for my work. I hope to meet you at one of the
lectures/training seminars I will be running giving then.
I also strongly recommend reading my two books written together with Boris Gelfand
and published under his name. An Indian GM and friend of mine called the first one:
“something truly special…” It is for others to decide if he is right. I definitely think it is
worth reading… Also, if you go to our blog, you will find some videos I made together
with Boris at the end of July this year. One of them shows how we created the books, the
two others are Q&A.
Jacob
I should add to this that the Quality Chess Puzzle Book easily fits into the Grandmaster
Preparation series. The exercises were collected and analysed by me and the book
finished by John, so that the tone is his, but the structure and ideas are mine and the
direction something John and I have always worked together on. Those wondering where
the difference is between John and me (none I presume), should know that there is no
real difference. We work together and our stuff is always a collaboration.
PREVIOUS NEXT
Thanks for your great description, Jacob! I’m really looking forward to re-
reading your books when I have finished the Yusupov-series which is super
good too. Keep up with the good work 🙂
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@pabstars
The Yusupov series is where I would send 75% of people…
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Jacob,
Thanks for sharing that informative email with everyone here. I have asked for
the Yusupov series for my birthday, so hope to have that soon. I intend to
study it in its entirety, even if some material in the earlier books might be a bit
below my level (~2100). Where would you slot the Yusupov books into the
above training plan?
Cheers,
Will
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Could someone recall me where is the discussion about time studing opening
compared to the total time according to the ELO?
Thank’s
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@Will
On top! I actually recommend a lot of people to have the books lying on the
toilet, if they are “easy” for them. You can read the articles in 1-2 sittings and
solve the exercises in one.
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@FredPhil
I cannot. But essentially I made it to GM without having great preparation. I did
find that it helped a lot, when I surpassed 2350, but today I think it is enough
to read a few good books and memorise the content. I have to be honest and
say that openings were never my strong suit, but my general philosophy is that
you have to be able to play well before you can explore good positions.
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Hi
With all this fantastic material I so wish you would move into online/software
training programs. The idea of course to have a responsive software feeding
the user exactly the kind of material and exercises he/she would benefit mostly
from. If you include the Yusupov material you would cover the marked from
1300 players to super GMs ;-). Monthly evaluations, mixed theory / exercises,
monthly progress chart and evaluation of weaknesses/strength etc. With your
brand (and the quality of material you would bring to the marked) everybody
would sign up regardless of price. Im talking early retirement for you and the
Team – you could quit work and start doing what you enjoy like writing chess
books and stuff like that.
regards,
Larsen_fan
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0. Yusupov books.
1. Calculation + QC Puzzle book.
1.5 Positional play (you start when you have point 1 well under way, and finish
it all together.
2. Practical chess defense + Strategic play.
3. AM1 + A&D + AM2
4. Excelling at technical play + Endgame play
5. Gelfand books.
6. Thinking inside the box.
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I thought Practical Chess Defense was significantly harder than the other ones,
so I do not own it (yet!). The order I am following is:
1. Positional play (already done twice, thinking on going over it for the third
time).
2. AM1 + Gelfand 1 (already done).
3. QC Puzzle book (already done).
4. Calculation + A&D (both under way).
5. Strategic play.
6. Endgame play. (I’ve done like 20% of it, but in the subway, so plan to go over
it more seriously starting from the beginning).
7. Thinking inside the box.
And in between, I will mix material from other publishers too 😛 But there are
not that many puzzle books out there, specially if you do not count tactical
puzzle books.
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@Gollum
No really. 5 days & 6 should be read parallel…
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Jacob Aagaard :
@FredPhil
I cannot. But essentially I made it to GM without having
great preparation. I did find that it helped a lot, when I
surpassed 2350, but today I think it is enough to read a few
good books and memorise the content. I have to be honest
and say that openings were never my strong suit, but my
general philosophy is that you have to be able to play well
before you can explore good positions.
I hope that all these worthy advices will be covered in GM Prep – Out of the
box.
Actually, I’m, really really fed up with general advices. Get to the point! How to
improve!
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Jacob, you have a divine talent for writing, is indescribable the way which I
admire your work, already said via email on one occasion, but I say again, my
sincere congratulations!
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Mr. Aagaard,
You have 2nd edition for Attacking Manual 1 ( 6 years ago ). I just wonder
whether you have plans to have 2nd or 3rd editions for your other GM Prep
books.
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The quick answer is no. The long answer is that whenever a book
is reprinted, we always look to see if we know of any corrections
that needs to be inserted. But a reworking of the books is not
needed and will not happen.
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@Supi
I appreciate it. More useful for me is probably what you think we can do better
though 😉
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@Jacob Aagaard
Jacob, the Yusupov books are really good. Where in the Yusupov series would
you insert Chess tactics from scratch, Mating the castled king and Chess
structures. Thanks for publishing such good and quality books!
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Thank you. The first two as parallel – they can be read whenever
you feel like it. The latter I would put after, but again, reading it
earlier would not damage you. On the contrary!
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Matt
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@Matt
Hi Matt,
There are various reasons why I do not want to do this. Mainly, because I think
that there are so many ways to do things that I do not want to give people the
impression that “their way” is wrong. We do regularly make recommendations
here on the blog and elsewhere, but we always stress that it is a
recommendation. As it is very hard to get people to understand that a
“provisional” publishing schedule is not final, we tend to think that qualifiers
don’t work and thus do not want to limit the possible ways of doing things by
suggesting what we think is useful in too formal a way.
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I know in the past, you did recommended GM Prep from Quality over your
Excelling series from Everyman. To me, the GM Prep series are workbooks for
Excelling series. The following are the orders I summarize from your comments
(note: (2), (3), (4), (5) could start in parallel; (2) probably starts a little earlier
than others)
I just wondering whether “Excelling at Combinational Play” fit into this – this is
more like calculation, but focusing on Sicilian Defense tactics. Should this be
part of ‘Calculation’ work?
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@Stephen Jiang
You are trying to make too many connections. Only Exc. Calculation and Exc.
Technical works this way from that series. Excelling at Positional Chess is a
workbook itself, not a manual. But yes, Attacking Manual 1 and Attack and
Defence definitely work together as a pair.
I would also not put PCD in any sequence. But it is still a good book, of course.
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I’m banging my head with Attack & Defense… it is hard! Or I’m not such a
good attacker… but you read AM1 and Gormally’s book and think it is really
easy, but then the A&D book kicks you in the ass.
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@Gollum
Easy to understand; hard to do. This is chess.
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One more question, do you have any plan to publish DVD or CD version of GP
series? I remember you talked about typing in Averbakh’s endgame yourself
during your own training. A lot of people here would save a lot of time if you
have pgn or cbv version of your books (By the way, Everyman is saleing your 5
Excelling books in pgn/cbv format).
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I read your review in chesscafe on Mark Dvoretsky’s book. That was long time
ago. Now Mr. Dvoretsky is RIP and we will miss any new books from him. I just
wonder whether you have plan to update your review on his work (and maybe
talk about how to use his work to combine with your work books, as you
mentioned in multiple places, your work had a lot of influence from him).
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@Stephen Jiang
I recall someone (I think it was Jacob) posting here in the past that they would
not produce cbv/pgn versions of their books. I would imagine that is because
they are so easy to pirate.
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@Will
Yes, you probably cannot do this nowadays. But the work done this way is not
wasted as you will learn on the way and if it is really too much you could split
the work amongst you and a friend for instance.
I don’t see the need btw to digitalize the whole work book – in fact I prefer
books and board for this type of training rather than screen. But I’m trying to
do it with opening books – and often never finish 😉 But it’s much easier to
type into pgn from a book than it is from a stream.
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@Stephen Jiang
No, I do not. Maybe Forward Chess though.
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@Stephen Jiang
I will write an 8 page obituary for NIC the issue after next.
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@Will
Forwardchess.com an app for IOS or Android is the way to go. I really should
put my GP books on there…
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hello @jacob Aagard – while you’re looking at new book son Forward Chess,
any chance of Yusupov’s series getting on there? That would be awesome…
Matt
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@Matt
No chance at the moment.
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@Jacob Aagaard
Do you have an opinion on whether there are benefits to mixing any of the
Dvoretsky books in to the above order?
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@PaulH
Yes, they can be used quite freely. I would add the newest (Prophylaxis) after or
before Strategic Play. I would have Endgame Manual together with Endgame
Play. The 9 old books I would read continuously, but if you have the English
editions, I would check the solutions with an engine. Mark had 100s of
corrections, but Olms were not that interested in putting them in. And
(controversially), I would advice against using the Analytical Manual. I know of
2700+ players that found it unreadable. Just too difficult. Tragicomedy you can
include whenever.
It is all rather loose anyway. The main thing is to work on your game, and you
will improve. I have yet to see it not working, although it is certainly no
shortcut.
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The book about piece play I’m reading together with ‘Attack and Defense’, for
no special reason really. I have solved only 10 exercises of the ‘warming up’
chapter, so no definitive opinion yet, but up until now, I’m doing quite ok.
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@Gollum
It was not the opinion of the 2600s I have worked with. They found Mark’s
book a lot easier.
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Maybe I’m not a good preventive thinker… The easy part of the Dvoretsky book
is that you need to find a line to refute and a line that you cannot refute. If you
stumble unto the line you cannot refute first, it can drive you crazy, as you
expect to refute it and then find something better… But I guess that knowing
there are those things to find can make it easier.
Around exercise 115 from chapter 1 I failed _a lot_, hence I felt it was time to
move on, as there are 180 exercises in that chapter and things were bound to
go worse from that point on.
In calculation the last exercises of a chapter are hard (really hard), but I think
I’m a little under the 50% mark overall, same thing happens in A&D. Maybe the
differential factor is that you divide your work into a lot more chapters than
Dvoretsky, hence the steep wall you find at the end of the chapter is not that
frustrating in your case.
For reference, I’m a little above 2200 (and that little bit has to be thanks to your
books).
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@Gollum
Continue the work and it will pay off in great ways. Chess is very difficult and
takes a long time to learn, but it can and will happen.
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@ Martin Dixon : Inside the chess mind which is JA book ( but not a QC one )
deals with this topic with different test positions submitted to average players
and titled players . Could interest you .
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@Martin Dixon
Have you tried using the method of the three questions? It is specifically
designed to help with this issue.
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Hi Jacob,
Where would Psakhis book ‘advanced chess tactics’ come into your list ?
Before, after or together with your ‘attack & defence’ book ?
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@Jacob
You mentioned in september that putting GP Series on forward chess is a
serious option. My question is, when approximately can we expect this to
happen?
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@Tim
Going from being an option to giving a date is a long step. If so, it would be
after Box is done so the whole series can be bought at a discount.
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@pawnmayhem
Parallel. Good books that cover the subject in different ways. Maybe between
the two volumes.
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I’m almost halfway through Smirin’s new book KIW. This could also be added
to “How to read Jacob’s books”. Even though the book is only related to one
opening, it is stuffed with tactics and it also contains quite a few exercises
before each chapter starts. It is truly a fantastic book because you really feel
Smirin’s dedication to chess and especially the KID.
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@pabstars
Smirin’s energy and enthusiasm is amazing. I helped a bit with structuring the
book. Ilya is a fantastic player and interesting personality, but of course he is
not a natural writer, so a bit of assistance has hopefully made the book more
accessible. Actually, I really love the book. We will see what else we put out
before the summer, but to me, it is our first possible candidate for a book of
the year nomination…
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Jacob Aagaard :
We will see what else we put out before the summer, …
Any hints?
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Jacob, I have voted for it as the best opening book 2016 on chesspub.com,
even though you can argue that it is at least as much a book on the middle
game. It is true treasure!
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@Jacob Aagaard
I agree, this is a superb book, and really a must for each KID player! He kept
the option open for a second volume, so who knows… And indeed you can use
this book also for training, because of the exercises at the start of each chapter.
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Hi Jacob, a question:
I am a 1700-1800 player so maybe the GMP series is a bit avanced for me, but I
am working with Calculation and Positional Play, which has been very useful
and rewarding, But I still feel my calculation is quite disordered, unstructured,
and randomized, (like A. Kotov describes in his Think Like a GM) specially in
caothic positions.
What advice would you give me in order to fix that?
Thank you
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Dear Jacob,
After finishing 300 exercise from Martin’s Chess Tactics from Scratch, which
tactics exercise book should be next, Quality Chess Puzzle Book, Grandmaster
Preparation: Calculation, or something else … ?
Thanks,
Leaf
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@Leaf
The Puzzle book will be difficult enough for now, I think 🙂
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Hi Jacob,
I have been hearing all the praise online around all of your chess books and I’m
really excited to start my collection with your books.
I currently have a rating of around 1500 on Chess.com and some people
mentioned it is a requirement to be around 1800+ to understand your
teachings from your books.
Is this true or can I find one book of yours to really devote my time and
dedication to and eventually grasp the knowledge they entail?
I’ve seen some previews of some of your books like Positional Play and I really
enjoy your writing style.
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@Des
Hi Des,
Yeah, they are probably a bit too difficult at this point. Thinking Inside the Box
is meant to be more accessible, but honestly, it is still a difficult book.
I do plan on writing some more accessible books over time, but at the moment
I am still doing high level books.
The ideal books for you are the Artur Yusupov series. On our front page, in the
left column, you can find a link to a special page about these books.
Thanks, Jacob
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@Jacob Aagaard
Thank you Jacob
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Hi Jacob,
I am a 1400 player, and I want to improve my Tactics and Endgame skills. What
books would you recommend for this? I think the GM Prep series is supposed
to be a bit advanced (2000 level). What books would you recommend for my
level?
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Hi Jacob
My rating is 2150. What do you think to do to be a great master? Thank you
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First off, all the Quality Chess books are amazing and I especially appreciate
Jacob’s books!
@Jacob Aagaard, I have two questions for you.
1. Given that Thinking Inside the Box was released a bit after this thread was
started, I assume you would recommend players read it first, i.e. before this:
2. I understand your three questions were distilled down from the original list
of nine questions. I would be very grateful if you would share the list of nine
questions you (originally) started with.
Warm regards,
Mike
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Hi Jacob,
Since we’re discussing working through your books, I have several questions.
Question: How was this advice intended to work practically given that it’s
impractical for any non-professional to sift thousands of games [worse too if
on the board taking one’s time as per the advice]. If this was a more popular
opening the numbers…
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Hi Jacob !
“Thinking inside the box” is the last one to be published, but do we read it first
as an introduction to the other books, or at the end to evaluate our knowledge
?
Thank for the answer.
Warm regards
Django
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Hello, I am an adult chess player (37) who in the last few years came back to
playing chess after many years of layoff (I learned at around 7; was never
committed to it; then played on and off throughout my teen years and 20s for
short periods). I play only on chess.com today, and my blitz rating is in the
1500s, and puzzle solving rating usually in the 2300s.
I have some couple of dozen chess books, including some of the best out there
for my level – Silman, Nunn, Seirawan, Watson’s opening books, FCO, and
some classic games collections, like by Fischer, Tal, Larsen, etc. I certainly
haven’t gone through all these books, in fact many I haven’t even opened yet.
What I am looking for is books/training material that has potential to
systemically improve my game, through a sustained and systematic study,
assuming I commit about 3-5 hours a week after work. I of course have many
problem areas, but I would say I got substantially better at calculation as a
result of doing thousands of puzzles on chess.com over the last 3 years, but I
am considerably weaker in understanding positional play and strategy.
I read many good things about the Yusupov series, but the entire 9 books
course may be a bit pricey for me. Given my level, would you recommend I
start at the Fundamentals (orange) books, or Beyond the Basics (blue)? Of
course, I’d welcome recommendation of any other books, or training manuals.
I would assume Dvoretsky and your books (JA) would be too difficult for my…
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@Igor faynshteyn
Your message was cut off due to the character limit, but I got the gist of it.
Yusupov’s books would seem perfect for the kind of systematic study you have
in mind. Considering what you’ve said about your positional/strategic play, I
imagine you’ll find the Fundamentals series to be ideal.
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@Andrew Greet thanks for your reply. I am assuming you recommend I start
with orange books, rather than assuming I am too strong for them and going
for blue? Also, are the orange books (like other colors) in ascending order of
difficulty (i.e. build up, then boost, then evolution), or are they the same
difficulty level but just different material coverage?
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Fundamentals = orange. All three orange books are the same approximate
difficulty level.
I can’t think of any special reason to work through the orange books in one
order or another. Most people start with ‘build up’ as it was the first one
published, but if you’re the type of rebellious miscreant who prefers to mix
things up and start with one of the others, you’ll also do fine.
And yes, definitely start with the orange series. Based on your own comments
about your positional play, I think you’ll find this series to be of great value in
elevating that side of your game. I guess you’ll rate higher on tactics – but even
if those sections are somewhat easier for you, there’s no harm in reinforcing
core tactical themes.
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Yusupov had organized remote training and divided his group in under 1500
(orange series by QC), 1800 (blue) and 2100 (green). That’s where this book
series come from. Even with round about 1800 FIDE and in the 1700s on
chess.com blitz i find some very challenging problems in the orange material
and some chapters where i have big problems to reach the pass marks in the
tests. I also think that the material from orange book one to orange book two
is getting a bit more complicated and sometimes he refers to former chapters.
Therefore i would suggest to use the order for anyone at my level or below.
Much stronger players maybe know all that stuff and for review that order isn’t
so important.
btw: Chess.com puzzles rating are inflated, the top 50 all have 5000 Elo or
more. My rating is also 2200+. I don’t guess i’m a good tactican.
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I agree with you Karl that chess.com puzzles are definitely inflated. My puzzles
rating currently there is almost 2400, and occasionally I am able to solve
puzzles rated at 2600+. I think they are some 500 pts inflated, in fact. Because
when I do “lessons” there that are rated by the masters who designed them,
like Silman, I am almost never able to fully solve 2100 puzzles.
Based on all the responses, I am persuaded: I’ll get the first 1-2 orange books
and see how it goes.
A related books question: has anyone read Zenon Franco’s move by move
books, from Everyman? Thanks again!
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@Igor Faynshteyn
Is there something about Franco that you are looking to know specifically? Or
the Move By Move books in general.
I do not own any of Franco’s Move-by-Move books. I can speak for others in
the series:
Ruy Lopez – Neil McDonald – Decent if you are new to the Ruy – Too shallow
for experienced Ruy players
Torre – Richard Palliser – Above average but not the best in the series
Modern Defense – Lakdawala – One of his better ones, but Caro-Kann beats it.
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Oh, and the one on the Old Indian by Junior Tay was also good. His ideas with
the Dark-Squared Bishop is interesting.
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It might not be that chique to promote every other publisher on this forum.
And those books mentioned might be interesting(I can’t judge), but from what
I have seen, in my honest opinion, it is not quality-chess material. Congrats to
my youth-idol Jop on his upcoming collaboration with Jacob. Eagerly awaiting
the material to compare it to steps.
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@Frank
2 things Frank:
1) Chique? What???? I even looked it up and it’s not in any English Dictionary.
What are you talking about?
2) Books by other publishers have been mentioned on this forum before, even
by the publishers themselves. It’s not like we are advertising other sites, like
“Hey everyone, such-and-such a publisher has this major sale for today only!”
That would be a whole different story, and that should not be done here.
Actually, I think Jacob once compared a New In Chess book to another book
previously written and questioned the copyright legality! I don’t recall the
name of the book. I seem to recall it being maybe a year or two ago, and it had
a black cover.
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1. Chess tactics from scratch ( + Learn chess the right way (5 vol) )
2. Mating the castled king and Positional Chess Sacrifices( + Art of attack)
3. Yusupov books ( + 100 endgames you must know)
What would you suggest for an 11 year old with 1300 FIDE rating is this a good
curriculum.
Thank you for all the good books by Quality Chess.
Regards – Parth.
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Hi Jacob,
can u suggest a book similar/good to your gradmaster series calculation.I have
read it couple of times.
thank you.
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Hello
I wanted to know that Jackob Aagard’s books are for what rating level?
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I thought all the analysis was computer checked, based on the many references
to computer analysis, but apparently not so. I prefer that the author leave some
room for error, otherwise the reader has little motivation to critically examine
the annotations, since it’s hard for a human to refute a computer’s analysis. I
decided to look at one of his games on my old Fritz12 program and I
discovered the following.
In the game Nataf vs Aagaard pg.44 after 24.Rc1? the comment is “…24.Qd3
was necessary in order to bring the Rook quickly to d1, and after 24…Nc5
25.Qd2 Black is clearly better, but nothing immediately conclusive strikes the
eye.” Perhaps it should have read “..strikes the human eye” because Fritz claims
that 25…Nxb3! then wins for Black.
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