wcywing wrote on 10/20/08 at 23:12:59:
i'm thinking about learning to play the Dragon. i know there is lots of theory to learn but its fun to play. i have NCO for the main lines, and of course i should sign up with chess publishing for anything new. but what about the other sources such as Dearing's book and Martin's book. i know theory keeps changing but one has to start somewhere. any comments will be appreciated.
If you want to learn the spirit, themes, do's and dont's of the Dragon, start With Chris Ward's
Winning With The Dragon 1. Continue the journey with
Winning With The Dragon 2 by the same author, after which you should be imbued with the thought process and armed with the tools neccessary to play the Dragon successfully.
Further recommended reading could be:
Easy Guide to the Dragon by Golubev - A concise but remarkably useful and accurate (for the most part) reference work.
Sicilian Dragon by Goran Kosanovic - A little known but quite good repertoire book on the Dragon, also very concise.
Play The Sicilian Dragon by Eddie Dearing - Quite a good book, well laid out, and the most current in print at the moment. Although its ostensibly a repertoire book, it does provide an overview on many topical and alternative lines to the ones suggested. Highly recommended despite Tiviakov's scathing condemnation of it.
Gufeld & Stetsko - Useless as a learning text and almost useless as a reference one.
Attila Schneider's two volume work - Clearly a labor of love and quite inspirational, but be warned many of his original analyses and conclusions have been proven to be incorrect over time in the sharper Yugoslav lines. Verdict, good but not great.
I don't have Andrew Martin's book on the Dragon, but if you are a fan of his style then by all means indulge yourself.
Hope that helps.
Toppy