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Holbox, these are interesting questions that I hope get a lot of replies. I have Collins' and Summerscale's books. Both are excellent. Both recommend quite attacking lines, but the repertoires are quite different. Collins recommends scotch, c3 sicilian, advance french, panov-botvinnik against caro-kann, 5. Nc3 against the petroff, a sort of 150-attack with Bg5 agains pirc/modern. Summerscale is a "d-pawn special": colle-zuckertort, 150-attack, barry attack. But he's not completely dogmatic, f.ex. he also recommends the classical queen's indian as the C-Z is not efficient against everything. Being a 1900 patzer who can only remember plans and not long variations, I have so far followed Summerscale. But I don't think Collins' book and the lines he recommends are too theoretical either, although somewhat more demanding than Summerscale. Out of the two, I think the repertoire Collins recommends contains more critical variations and is better for an ambitious player like yourself. However, as they recommend very different lines, it also depends what sort of player you are. If are a "d4-player by heart", you could also consider two very well received books that are not on your list: Richard Palliser's Play 1.d4 (quite positional, I'm told) and John Cox's starting out book on d4 (quite aggressive and ambitious repertoire, I'm told). There may be other candidates too.
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