Just find an opening you are interested in and go from there.
This book is more of a reference than a book you read through all the way. I don't know if there is a new edition out, but there might be after such a long time. Modern Chess Openings 14th edition came out in 1999. Search some online sites for used, less costly copies until you get a better idea what you might like (Thrift, Alibris, Betterworld books are a few that are usually much less expensive than Amazon, although Amazon does often have good reviews). There are also many much less comprehensive openings books for less experienced players. If a comprehensive book of this type is desired, better to consider Fundamental Chess Openings by Paul Van der Sterren. Sixty years ago it was one of the very few English language offerings. There are so many much more valuable opening books nowadays, that explain, rather than dump thousands of variations, with a +/=/- at the end of each. Has been a fossil for most of the last fifty years and longer. There are also many much less comprehensive openings boo This book is a waste of time and money. John lost his fight to cancer at the beginning of 2017, making this book (and his letter to me pasted into the front) a cherished possession.Īnd here's something else I wrote about my chess endeavours. It took me a very long time to understand the chess shorthand used in the book, but John helped me and we played it this way via SMS for some time. my father has a more modern version of it and the two of us occasionally tried out the opening moves it features. As such, there's much to learn - even from this extremely old book. It might be old, but so is the game of chess itself. John lost his fight to cancer at A good chess friend, John Creeke, decided to pass his 1952 (8th) edition on to me. With this course, you’ll learn aggressive ideas on some of the most common openings (not sidelines) which have withstood the test of time.A good chess friend, John Creeke, decided to pass his 1952 (8th) edition on to me. Many of us are not chess professionals, so finding the time to study them is indeed challenging. Nowadays, we are swamped with opening lines that can go over 30 or 40 moves. Playing an opening based on understanding is great. Nor is it for the beginning chess player.įor instance, you need to have a good understanding of algebraic notation to even start to comprehend this book and even then it’s hard to follow. In this 14th edition of the book, Nick de Firmain describes many opening strategies and variations of each opening. First published in 1911, “Modern Chess Openings” (PDF) by Richard Clewin Griffith (1872–1955) and John Herbert White (1880–1920), has been called “the first scientific study of the openings in the twentieth century”.