Taming Wild Chess Openings : How to Deal with the Good, the Bad and the Ugly Over the Chess Board

 

Another curious and original book from newinchess publisher now available. John Watson and Eric Schiller have compiled for this book an infinity of lines for the black and white, classified as "bad, ugly, good", as you can see in the information of this title less usual but not less frequent in the chess of Club today that have their poison if we are not prepared ...

Effective recipes for club players

No matter what unconventional, irrational or even crazy some opening chess, sooner or later, all chess players will have to face us.

When this happens, you can count on a well-prepared rival who is more than happy to launch his crazy line.

John Watson and Eric Schiller offer club players solutions to a large selection of these rarely played or difficult chess openings. They focus on ideas and strategy, with enough analysis to meet the needs of practical play.

Only when a strong response is required, Watson and Schiller will recommend a more complex variation full of tactics. In the vast majority of cases they present a simple and safe way to approach the position, requiring little memorization and still leads to a promising game.

There is a lot of fun stuff in this book, and you might be surprised to see how even great strong teachers have indulged in the craziest variants. Chess is not all to play the main lines and 20 theory moves!

John Watson (1951) is an international master who has written more than 30 books, several of which have won prestigious awards. He trained Tal Shaked, the 1997 Junior World Champion.

Eric Schiller (1955) is an American FIDE Master who is a very productive writer of chess. He has been a chess teacher for more than 30 years.

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