nocteus wrote on 05/02/13 at 10:23:02:
Markovich wrote on 04/30/13 at 20:08:26:
I personally reject that an openings work could, in general, be important (I realize that the preferences are personal). Uhlmann's is the one mentioned below that stands out as great chess literature, if any do.
I don't agree. I understand your general philosophy adverse to learning theory to the benefit of 'pure' tactical play education (especially through open games), but I do not share it.
Yes this education is compulsory for youngster and first-learners with
no experience of the game. But once you get enough experience from
OTB and offical games, whatever your rating is, you get tastes. With tastes, trial-and-errors, you build strategic inclinations or believes towards piece development and pawn structures. Then after, you build your own philosophy of play - or intend to do so. Thus, your journey begins : you begin searching, testing, confronting, looking for models, inspiration, etc...
Fine, but this really has nothing to do with my view that in general openings works do not rise to the level of great, or even good, chess literature. I posted that in reaction to some of the books listed as favorites here. We could debate my ideas about chess education in another thread, though it becomes tiresome to have to do so here, year after year. I am increasingly willing to let those preoccupied with questions of the student's "taste" and "style" to wallow in their folly. I am only sorry for their students.
One's journey does indeed begin. The question is, when.
Quote:
It is my belief that many opening works (Polugaevsky's Sicilian, Watson's French, ...) are much more than simple theoretical manuals : they teach you about middlegame, endgames, piece activity; they guide you through the game and confront you with other people's experience, philosophies, beliefs and searches as effectively as a good game collection).
Sure, MCO is a waste of time.
I would not say "many." There are probably about ten books devoted to the opening that I would consider good chess literature. Polugaevsky's is among them. I admire Watson very much and I find his works extremely useful (I buy all of them), but I think that the various editions of Play the French do not aspire to be chess literature (stuff you keep on your shelf forever and pore over on winter evenings). If they were chess literature, there wouldn't be four editions, you know?
The problem with opening variations is that they are ephemeral. They are very soon superceded by new variations. You're right that openings works often include middlegame instruction (less so, endgame). One recent standout is Marin's two-volume set on how to play Black after 1...e5. But I wouldn't call Marin's work chess literature. I recently discarded two or three hundred opening works that I had accumulated during the 1970s - 1990s (not all my collection from that period, but most). I should have done it sooner.
And let's face it:
most opening books are crap.
P.S. MCO was not a waste of time in it's day, nor was ECO. It's just that nowadays, the scope of theory is too vast to fit in an openings compendium, and it changes so fast that any compendium would be obsolete when it was still in the galleys.