Originally posted by Hans Jung
					
						
						
							
							
							
							
								
								
								
								
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		A Sign of the Chess Times
				
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 You have expressed it so well Brad, thats exactly the way I feel.Originally posted by Brad Thomson View Post
 The chess book I go to most is Nick's Best, with the signature of the author on the title page. It is easily readable (the autograph I mean), as opposed to some signatures that are difficult to decipher. Other than this book I like to physically pull out and read/study from Nunn's three volumes on the endgame. I would have no interest in flipping through these pages on a computer screen looking at a 2D board. A large part of the joy is feeling the wood, moving it around, positioning the book and so forth. Not to mention having a cat move in and deliberately topple pieces. Even when watching the events online such as Tata, I keep my best set in front of me following a game of choice and spend most of my time looking at the real board rather than the computer. I tend only to watch the screen if Svidler and others are discussing my specific game of choice. My eyes do not like screens on computers or televisions unless absolutely necessary.
 As regards Nick's Best it truly is an easy read and thoroughly expressed in Lawrence's appealing and unique writing style. A vintage piece of Canadian chess heritage that lives every time you pick it up. I have two copies and I still select parts to read and marvel at the games and commentary and think golden thoughts of yesteryear about Nick and Lawrence. Such memories!
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 There my memory partially fails me. Actually a few said that to me - one was Ray Stone (partially in jest) another was Dave Jackson to someone else in my presence. What I remember of Kevin is in his last statement (that I read) he recommended a couple of good Reinfeld books. I woould never admit to owning any Reinfeld books.Originally posted by Brad Thomson View Post
 Someone said, "Burn your Reinfeld books." Was it Kevin?
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 If you check Jeff Sonas's site, it looks like Reinfeld was solid/strong IM strength in his prime. And you're right, Hans, Kevin did have a couple of Reinfeld books in his list of favourites (Tarrasch's Best Games and Hypomodern Chess) so K. must have been reasonably satisfied with the quality of FR's annotations. To my way of thinking, Reinfeld, Chernev, and Horowitz all had as their primary aim the popularization of chess. And they did a good job!Originally posted by Hans Jung View Post
 There my memory partially fails me. Actually a few said that to me - one was Ray Stone (partially in jest) another was Dave Jackson to someone else in my presence. What I remember of Kevin is in his last statement (that I read) he recommended a couple of good Reinfeld books. I woould never admit to owning any Reinfeld books.
 
 Here's a link to Kevin's book list:
 https://canchess.tripod.com/favorite.htm"We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office." - Aesop
 "Only the dead have seen the end of war." - Plato
 "If once a man indulges himself in murder, very soon he comes to think little of robbing; and from robbing he comes next to drinking and Sabbath-breaking, and from that to incivility and procrastination." - Thomas De Quincey
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 Only 1300+ pages? How does it compare with "Kotronias on the King's Indian", an epic five volume series that offers a seemingly thorough repertoire (one line only) for BlackOriginally posted by Peter McKillop View PostFrom time to time, like many of you probably, I like to download publishers' pdf excerpts from recently published books to see if anything grabs my attention. Quality Chess recently issued two huge books on the KID by GM Gawain Jones; 1300+ pages in total. Jones made this humourous (to me) comment: "The complete repertoire ended up being quite large, but I hope after working through it you’ll agree with me that Black’s play is quite logical, making it easier to remember." Right! You know what? It's good to be a chess hack and not have to worry about remembering 1,300 pages of theory!
 
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 Kotronias: 2,300+ pagesOriginally posted by Fred Henderson View Post
 Only 1300+ pages? How does it compare with "Kotronias on the King's Indian", an epic five volume series that offers a seemingly thorough repertoire (one line only) for Black"We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office." - Aesop
 "Only the dead have seen the end of war." - Plato
 "If once a man indulges himself in murder, very soon he comes to think little of robbing; and from robbing he comes next to drinking and Sabbath-breaking, and from that to incivility and procrastination." - Thomas De Quincey
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 I totally agree Brad! Another thing I do with my favourite books is take them to Staples to get spiral-bound. It's not expensive, and you don't have to keep holding the book open lolOriginally posted by Brad Thomson View Post
 The chess book I go to most is Nick's Best, with the signature of the author on the title page. It is easily readable (the autograph I mean), as opposed to some signatures that are difficult to decipher. Other than this book I like to physically pull out and read/study from Nunn's three volumes on the endgame. I would have no interest in flipping through these pages on a computer screen looking at a 2D board. A large part of the joy is feeling the wood, moving it around, positioning the book and so forth. Not to mention having a cat move in and deliberately topple pieces. Even when watching the events online such as Tata, I keep my best set in front of me following a game of choice and spend most of my time looking at the real board rather than the computer. I tend only to watch the screen if Svidler and others are discussing my specific game of choice. My eyes do not like screens on computers or televisions unless absolutely necessary.
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 What a great idea, Aris. Typically what does it cost to have a book spiral-bound?Originally posted by Aris Marghetis View Post
 I totally agree Brad! Another thing I do with my favourite books is take them to Staples to get spiral-bound. It's not expensive, and you don't have to keep holding the book open lol"We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office." - Aesop
 "Only the dead have seen the end of war." - Plato
 "If once a man indulges himself in murder, very soon he comes to think little of robbing; and from robbing he comes next to drinking and Sabbath-breaking, and from that to incivility and procrastination." - Thomas De Quincey
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 Hi Peter, I can't remember exactly, but I get a good "that was worth it" feeling every time I open such a book. I'm guessing that it would now be the cost of a drive-thru meal, but that is guessing still (inflation happens) - and you don't even need bookmarks anymore, as you can just leave the book open. In addition, to your own personal taste, you can add clear (or coloured) plastic covers, etc. I think the only one I ever hesitated doing due to cost was How To Reassess Your Chess, as after a certain number of pages, the spiralling mechanism changes, and you enter another cost bracket.Originally posted by Peter McKillop View Post
 What a great idea, Aris. Typically what does it cost to have a book spiral-bound?
 
 P.S. note when dealing with hardcovers, I believe you lose the actual hard covers when you spiral-bind
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 When I was younger, friends told me buying chess books would help me improve. So I bought some chess books. Maybe too many.
 So, there was some improvement, but "diminishing returns" maybe?
 
 But now that I look back over the years, I think I know what went wrong. I have one question.
 
 Was I supposed to read them? :)
 
 
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 The day I knew my chess peak was passed was playing a tournament, winning my game, and my young opponent asking why I deviated from my usual way of playing that opening. I confidently informed him I'd never played that variation before and he opened his database to show me two games I'd played in the line (both of which I'd played much better in the past than I did against him). Kids today don't study books - they study opponents and databases.Originally posted by Hans Jung View PostI am sure I'll encounter some young chess player in the near future who will say - oh yes I have memorized Jones KID. On the other hand are young chess players even reading any kind of chess book these days? I guess its database memorization if its anything.
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