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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) Winning Chess Middlegames (Read 16463 times)
MarinFan
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #26 - 01/14/26 at 16:36:04
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Have ordered the new edition, has lots, claim 60%, new material using recent games. The original is one of my favorite chess books.
  
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Antillian
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #25 - 05/29/09 at 12:13:56
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I recently got my copy and thought I would resurrect this old thread to add my voice of approval to this book which will be of tremendous value to any player of the classical 1. d4 defences on the white or black side.
  

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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #24 - 03/27/09 at 05:42:47
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I haven't read this book from cover to cover yet, but I highly recommend it - I have not seen pawn structures covered in this much detail before. If you are a Nimzo-Indian devotee from either colour, then this book is perhaps even more important than a repertoire book on the Nimzo.
  

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Gerry1970
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #23 - 03/27/09 at 05:32:59
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Hello:

Thanks for taking the time to answer my questions. And congrats on your success! I have to try and find more time to work hard on chess.

Gerry
  
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Seth_Xoma
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #22 - 03/27/09 at 03:11:49
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Gerry1970 wrote on 03/27/09 at 00:29:18:
Hello Seth:

Thanks for the review. My question is not about the book itself but a comment of yours. I hope it's OK to ask it in this thread.

How on earth do you go through such a book (admittedly lots of prose but also lots of variations) so quickly? Is this a high-level pass right now and you will hit it in more detail later? Or are you reading the book without a board?

I may have asked this question previously but I cannot do anything like this. We are often told today to set up the game on a board as opposed to using a database. All this takes a lot of time.

But if someone can go through a book so quickly it may also speak to their dedication to improve. Also if people do this and I cannot, I see it potentially gives them a huge advantage in terms of improvement. They will be exposed to so many more positions which will obviously help OTB.

Any help appreciated.

Gerry


For chapter one, I played out the games and most of the variations on a board. I largely skipped the opening theory parts, and some of the smaller variations I calculated in my head. I paid especially close attention to the verbal explanations. I'm sure I missed some stuff, but I never intend to read a book just once. I will go through it again some time in the future. I will go slower and play through every variation until I feel I understand what's going on.

I am taking a different approach with chapter two. I don't see the Nimzo Saemisch structure in my games very often, but Isolated Queen pawns do arise in my games. For this reason, I am only taking a game or two a day instead of the four to six a day I was doing.

Regarding dedication to improve: I would say I definitely have a thirst for it. I've got most of Dvoretsky's works, and he's insanely difficult at times, but I cherish the challenge and don't get dismayed when I fail to solve several of his puzzles in a row. I used to not like studying endgames, but I realized I needed to learn to develop a taste for it. For me, alot about improving is developing a taste for the areas in which I am weakest, or care the least about, and working hard on them. This seems to be working...I've gained something like 50 USCF rating points my last 5-6 tournaments, and I have been playing at a 2350 average over the same time period (my rating currently is 2285). Lots of draws against IMs, but zero wins.

It might help that my memory is, I guess, above average. Not too far back, I took the Spark Notes quiz on Moby Dick some 6 years after I read it, and missed only 2 questions out of 25. I retain alot of information I read, even at a fast pace.
  
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Gerry1970
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #21 - 03/27/09 at 00:29:18
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Hello Seth:

Thanks for the review. My question is not about the book itself but a comment of yours. I hope it's OK to ask it in this thread.

How on earth do you go through such a book (admittedly lots of prose but also lots of variations) so quickly? Is this a high-level pass right now and you will hit it in more detail later? Or are you reading the book without a board?

I may have asked this question previously but I cannot do anything like this. We are often told today to set up the game on a board as opposed to using a database. All this takes a lot of time.

But if someone can go through a book so quickly it may also speak to their dedication to improve. Also if people do this and I cannot, I see it potentially gives them a huge advantage in terms of improvement. They will be exposed to so many more positions which will obviously help OTB.

Any help appreciated.

Gerry
  
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Seth_Xoma
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #20 - 03/26/09 at 23:18:09
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"Pawns are the soul of chess." -Philidor

Well, I've had this book for a few days, and am very, very happy I got it. I devoured the first chapter, which was 84 pages in length and covered mostly the Nimzo Saemisch. I'm well into the IQP chapter now.

Emphasis on pawn structure is something alien to me, since I have primarily played 1.e4 with white, and the Najdorf and KID with Black (though lately I have done all kinds of experimenting with openings for both colors in an effort to understand more types of positions). My large chess library had not a single book on pawns. OK, so some books do have a small chapter on pawns, but nothing special. My general attitude had been that pawns were only good for sacrificing  Roll Eyes. I got my first clue that this attitude was incorrect when I watched Kasimdzhanov's DVD on strategy (which I also highly recommend). 

Why the big deal about pawns? Pawns are helpful reminders of how play could and should develop. You cannot formulate a plan without taking into consideration those little foot soldiers. This book does an excellent job of explaining clearly the ins and outs of certain pawn structures. Basic questions are answered, like: Where should both sides be playing? Which pieces are problem pieces? Also, more advanced questions are tackled, such as: Do the positions reach a crisis point earlier or later in this opening/structure? Would this fit my style?

Other things I like about this book: it is well made (quality paper), very well organized, the author clearly spent alot of time and effort into writing it, and he is brutally honest at times. Lots of verbal explanations, and not a deluge of variations.

Now Sokolov does not cover all pawn structures. There are no Grunfelds, Sicilians, or hedgehogs in this book. He does, however, thoroughly cover structures that arise from most classical queen pawn openings. For example: the Tarrasch Defense, the Semi-Tarrasch, the Nimzo Saemisch, the Queen's Gambit Accepted, some QID positions, some QGD positions (like the Tartakower), Ragozin, etc. Often he will give an overview of an entire defense to further give you a feel for resulting positions, as Sokolov did with the Tarrasch Defense. I would suggest if anyone plays 1.d4 or one of the above defenses to it, this book is a must-buy.

Each game has been commented on throughout. He does not stop annotating after the opening stage. In fact, you could probably skip the emphasis on openings and pawn structures and still get lots out of this book. 45 chess lessons from a world class player like Sokolov for so little money is hard to pass up.

I believe this book will greatly reward anyone who puts in the time and work to read it, study it, eat it, and know it inside out. Even if you don't play any of the openings listed above, this book will open your eyes to planning and to the power of the pawn.

Hope this was helpful to anyone thinking about buying it.
  
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #19 - 03/24/09 at 21:12:39
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I received my copy yesterday and from the first glance I am very pleased. We can't expect to get such in-depth coverage of too many openings in "only" 270 pages, but this book will be a must have for all Nimzo or QG players. 
Pawn structures are the main subject but Sokolov also provides an excellent overview of the openings employed in those 45 games. 
So I don't play Nimzo, but maybe this book will help me adopt it  Cool In any case, I am looking forward to reading the book and raising my general understanding of the game.

I am also interested in hearing NM Seth's opinion  Cool
  
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Seth_Xoma
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #18 - 03/20/09 at 05:09:15
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After thinking on it for a long time, I decided to order this book. I'll get it in the mail in a few days. Maybe I'll post my impressions on it later. I don't have any books that deal specifically with pawn structures, so maybe this'll fill a gap in my chess library.
  
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #17 - 03/18/09 at 16:52:29
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Also by Jonathan Rowson in NIC; the pull-quote was to the effect that he thinks the book is useful even for GMs.

I saw a similar opinion expressed in a Dutch chess forum I visit, where a player rated around 2200 said things like "the material is great" and that the book "might become a classic."
  
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #16 - 03/18/09 at 16:33:36
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Fluffy has done a review at Chess Cafe.

"When I was young, at least in a chess sense, one of my favourite books was Andy Soltis’s Pawn Structure Chess. This old book was a basic guide to middlegame structures. It contained explanations and illustrative games dealing with such structures as This was a useful guide and it helped me a great deal in my understanding of pawn structures and their relationship to middlegame planning. Sokolov’s book does not examine structures such as these, as they have already been well covered in chess literature, and not only by Soltis. Winning Chess Middlegames looks at pawn structures that are very common in modern tournament play that are not easily found in chess books.

The full review can he found at http://www.chesscafe.com/Reviews/books.htm

  

"Breakthrough results come about by a series of good decisions, diligently executed and accumulated one on top of another." Jim Collins --- Good to Great
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #15 - 02/25/09 at 15:55:06
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Thanks kylemeister and singdoc for the info.

Bye John S
  
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #14 - 02/24/09 at 23:43:56
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There is considerable KID material in the two books I mentioned earlier (by Soltis and Marovic).
  
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #13 - 02/24/09 at 23:24:58
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MarinFan wrote on 02/24/09 at 12:55:52:
This book is very good for d4 players, and classic d4 defences. For example there is some great information on QGD Tartakower, which people on this forum conplain of lack of recent coverage. Wish there was something similar for KID, but suppose you can't play that opening in a pawn structure way...

Bye John S


If you can find a second hand copy of Mastering the King's Indian Defense by Ponzetto and Bellin, that is probably what you're looking for.
  
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MarinFan
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #12 - 02/24/09 at 12:55:52
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This book is very good for d4 players, and classic d4 defences. For example there is some great information on QGD Tartakower, which people on this forum conplain of lack of recent coverage. Wish there was something similar for KID, but suppose you can't play that opening in a pawn structure way...

Bye John S
  
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #11 - 02/11/09 at 19:28:21
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@ Dragan Glas,

You are right, that Barburin also discussed hanging pawn structures,
but it was only a small section of his book and mainly in relation to hanging pawn structures arising from a isolated pawn structure.

As far as I know Marovic wrote 4 middle game books:
Beside the two allready mentioned, the other two are:
Secrets of Chess Transformations (converting advantages)
Secrets of Positional Chess

Obviously you cant write on positional chess without touching the subject of pawn structures, but there is more to it than that: piece positioning and piece coordination, regrouping your pieces etc.
  
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #10 - 02/11/09 at 19:14:55
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Greetings,

Baburin does have a section on hanging pawns (isolated pawn couplet or IPC, as he calls them) and discusses the various pawn structure transformations related to the IQP/IPC.

[I thought that that had been resolved!?]

What might also be useful is a comparison of the various books on pawn structures as to which is best!?

Also, I thought Marovic had written four books related to pawns, not just two?!

Kindest regards,

Dragan Glas
  
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #9 - 02/11/09 at 18:30:32
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Well, 
on the bright side:
"Winning pawn structures" (Barburin) only covered the isolated d-pawn.
Still a classical book (unfortunately Batchford cheated the author out of his fee) 
Even if youre a top GM player, you cant force an e4 opening by legal means.........
when you have black!
so the book will probably be usefull regardless your white opening repertoire.  Smiley

By the way some pawn structures occasionally make a surprise appearance: 
The minority attack is well known as White's main strategic weapon in the Exchange variation of the Queens Gambit.
But do you know it as an essential weapon for the black side in the (spanish) Marshall Attack, and in some variations of the Kings Gambit accepted?
It's my experience that not a few white e4 players only recognize this, when it is allready too late ...... Smiley
Finally Capablanca showed great originality by launching a mirror minority attack against the pawn structure e5-f6-g7-h7
--------------------------------------------------------------------------


As for myself I dont see the necessity to buy a new book on pawn structures.
Besides Barburin's book I own a set of Marovic books:
Understanding pawn play in chess
Dynamical pawnplay in chess (devoting approx 100 pages to typical pawn play in sicilian systems of a total of 270 pg.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shereshevsky's two volume set:
on typical endgames related to pawnstructures ordered by opening.
These books could do with a reprint, as the price for a second hand copy seems to have gone through the roof these days  Sad
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
And I must have buried an ancient copy of Kmoch's
Kunst der Bauernfuehrung somewhere. Embarrassed
Here is another unfortunate title as a very large part of this book only 
treats closed ruy lopez (with a white pawn on d5) and benoni pawn structures.
  
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #8 - 02/11/09 at 13:22:14
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From my quick browse at a bookstal - I agree the pawn structures seem to be mainly from QID or NID maybe QG as well. It looked OK I am not sure that it is bringing anything new to the party that other pawn structure books have not.
  
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #7 - 02/11/09 at 12:51:27
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I received the book today and I can say it is very good like the usual quality of New in Chess books. For d4 players is a must but I think that others can benefit from the book because an isolated pawn position and the treatment of the position and what one can learn is equal for isolated pawns in French or Caro and once one learn how to treat the position like hanging pawns or majorities on one side it is equal for lots of openings. I rate this book very highly!  Wink
  

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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #6 - 02/04/09 at 23:00:56
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Thanks for the feedback, MilenPetrov,

I am not sure I fully understand your disappointment. One would naturally normally expect d4 structures to dominate any pawn structure book, no? but I can suppose  if it is exclusive to d4 structures,  a 1. e4 player might be let down. ( Personally, I don't mind that it concentrates on d4 pawn structures since I am a d4 player.)

On the point of wanting more games, if the book is  already 290 pages, I suppose it is a tradeoff between more games and less depth per game.

I may probably get this book, if nothing else but to see a bunch of d4 middlegames annotated by a fine player like Sokolov. 
  

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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #5 - 02/04/09 at 21:52:24
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Hello, today i got my copy of the book.
I spent some 2-3 hours checking the content and my first impression is that i spent my money for nothing. OK we have about 48 typical pawn structures covered but they are mainly from 1.d4 openings. I was interested in doubled pawns (because of my Sicilian Rauzer repertoire) and i was simply bored when I saw that all the structures are arising from NID or QID or TD. Maybe it would be better if the book was named something like 1.d4 pawn structures. There is no single game arising from open or semi-open openings. Brrrrrrr.
Or maybe we need to wait a second volume covering these and spend another 25 EUR.
My impression is that it is not enough to analyse in depth 1 or 2 games which cover a typical pawn structure. Even if they are played by top GMs. For example the Saemisch structure in NID is covered only in one or two games, but it is not enough. I can recall at least 10 more typical classic games which show the typical plans.
My overal assessment is that the book is beyond the expectations.
My rating is 3/10 (or even 1/10) and it does not worth money  Angry
  
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #4 - 02/02/09 at 05:36:23
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007 Foreword by Michael Adams 

009 Introduction 

011 Chapter 1 Doubled Pawns: 12 essential structures 

085 Chapter 2 Isolated Pawns: 10 essential structures 

179 Chapter 3 Hanging Pawns: 4 essential structures 

221 Chapter 4 Pawn Majority in the Centre: 7 essential structures 

283 Index of Players 

285 List of Games 
  

Don't check me with no lightweight stuff.
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #3 - 02/02/09 at 01:35:56
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Based the following limited information from BCM Chess, the focus seems somewhat different from Soltis' Pawn Structure Chess:

Winning Chess Middlegames: An Essential Guide to Pawn Structures - Ivan Sokolov

Paperback, 260 pages

Winning Chess Middlegames addresses the often ignored but extremely important topic of pawn structures, divided into four main types: doubled pawns, isolated pawns, hanging pawns and pawn majorities. With its highly accessible verbal explanations and deep analyses of top-level games, this book helps you to solve the basic problems of the middlegame: space, tension and inititative.

Club players studying Winning Chess Middlegames will:

* greatly enhance their middlegame skills

* develop an accurate feeling as to which particular positions suit their style

* acquire new strategic and practical opening knowledge
  

"Breakthrough results come about by a series of good decisions, diligently executed and accumulated one on top of another." Jim Collins --- Good to Great
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #2 - 01/30/09 at 16:20:42
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I have ordered that book and hope will receive it in a few days. Then I will check it and will be able to tell my opinion. The title sounds best selling but I am not sure if the content will be of such quality. I tried to find the Content in the internet but unfortunately did not succeed. So I decided to spend some money without reading a single review.
  
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Re: Winning Chess Middlegames
Reply #1 - 01/29/09 at 03:18:46
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I second that question.  I wonder how it compares to "Pawn Structure Chess" and "Dynamic Pawn Play in Chess," both of which I like a lot.
  
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Winning Chess Middlegames
01/29/09 at 02:53:26
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This is the title of Grandmaster Ivan Sokolov's new book on middlegame structures. Anybody have it yet? Do you like it? Could you give a review of it? Any information is welcomed Smiley
  
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