Thanks for the thoughts, suggestions and encouragement, I appreciate them.
Funny that you mention Reinfeld dfan, I've enjoyed the Capablanca games I've played over thus far so much that I've already been looking for another collection of his games to add to CBCE and, I was a little surprised to learn that Reinfeld still seems to be the best general collection of Capablanca games available in english.
The Life & Games of Akiva Rubinstein: Volume 1: Uncrowned King by Donaldson is also in the cart, so to speak (though I'm not sure at what rating it would be wise to read it).
The reviews of Marin' Learn from the Legends and Giddins' 50 Essential Chess Lessons were pretty compelling. I've added them to my list.
A quote from Alias' excellent link earlier in the thread:
"...there is something mysterious about his play, no one else could cope with things like he did. It is easier for me to talk about Karpov because his collection of games was my first chess book. I studied his work when I was a child, later I played quite a few games against him. He is a versatile chess player, a good tactician who brilliantly calculates lines and positionally very strong. He also has a distinctive feature. Funnily enough, he has effectively denied Steinitz's pronouncement: if you have an advantage you must attack, otherwise, you will lose it. When having an edge, Karpov often marked time and still gained the advantage! I don't know anyone else who could do that, it's incredible. I was always impressed and delighted by this skill. When it looked like it was high time to start a decisive attack, Karpov played a3, h3, and his opponent's position collapsed." Kramnik on Karpov
http://www.kramnik.com/eng/interviews/getinterview.aspx?id=61