I now have
Beating the Winawer - The h4 Ram by Kotronias, Ivanov, and Obodchuk. When first perusing the book, I was soon reminded of TonyRo's comments in the thread about
The Benko Bible Volume 1, which is also written by Kontronias and Ivanov and published by Russell Enterprises.
Beating the Winawer is loaded with material including original analysis, but it's lacking in readability and organization.
The book's flaws became readily apparent when I looked more deeply at Chapter 3, which covers what the authors call the "Main Line". This and all other chapters are centered around a single game, the moves of which are presented in bold type. For Chapter 3, this game is Vachier-Lagrave - Nepomniachtchi, Candidates Tournament Ekaterinburg 2020. After the moves 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.e5 c5 5.a3 Bxc3+ 6.bxc3 Ne7 7.h4 Qc7 8.h5 h6 9.Rb1 b6 10.Qg4 Rg8, the authors break away from the MVL-Nepo game for an extended examination of Black's alternatives to 10...Rg8. All of this material is presented in plain text, with only occasional diagrams and blank lines between paragraphs to break up what would otherwise be a solid wall of text. Wondering where the MVL-Nepo game would be resumed, I paged forward repeatedly and eventually found the next bolded move (MVL's 11.Bb5+) more than thirteen pages later!
TonyRo's remark about
The Benko Bible definitely applies to the Winawer book as well: "One thing I need to stress about this book again is how poorly it's edited. They really needed to separate some of this stuff into A/B/C main variations, with A1, A2, etc, and more bold."
The one redeeming organizational feature in
Beating the Winawer is the Index of Variations in the back of the book. It definitely helps in navigating the mounds of text, but it would be even better to have something like this at the beginning of each chapter, like books from Thinkers Publishing and Quality Chess. This would eliminate the need to constantly flip to the back of the book to get one's bearings. The index in the Winawer book only lists main variations, so the reader still has to flip through pages to find if moves within these lines are covered. Also, as helpful as the index is, it can't overcome the typography. I tried to look up a move listed in the index, and it did indeed appear on the indicated page, but it was buried in the middle of a paragraph with no visual aids to alert the reader that this was the beginning of a new variation.
Moving on to my question in Reply #19 - Anish Giri covered the 7.h4 Winawer in his Chessable Lifetime Repertoire course on the French. He deviated from Nepo's 9...b6, instead recommending 9...Nbc6, with the intention of meeting 10.Qg4 (the usual move in this position) with 10...Rg8. Giri indicated the rook move to be a novelty, and the Mega Database shows no occurrences of this move until after Giri's course was published in August 2020. The Modern Chess database by Jobava and Basso mentioned by FreeRepublic in Reply #18 recommends the same 9...Nbc6 10.Qg4 Rg8. Both sources conclude Black equalizes with 10...Rg8.
I searched through
Beating the Winawer for the authors' recommendation against 10...Rg8, but they only cover the older 10...Nf5, even though the Mega Database lists 27 games with 10...Rg8 since September, 2020. After going back and looking through
Beating the Winawer, I realized there didn't seem to be many games from 2020 and none from after that year. The MVL-Nepo game was played in March 2020, so I wonder if the cutoff date for material in the book is sometime between March and August 2020.
Forum members may recall that this new book first appeared several years ago in the "Coming Soon" section of the Thinkers Publishing website. Back then it had a slightly different title (
Beat the French Winawer Variation) and only Kotronias and Ivanov were listed as the authors. After languishing for quite some time in the "Coming Soon" section, the book simply disappeared sometime around March 2024 without being published. It resurfaced in the later part of 2025 in the "Upcoming Titles" section of the Russell Enterprises site with its current title and a third coauthor, IM Andrei Obodchuk. It's pure speculation on my part, but I wonder if the manuscript submitted to Thinkers was never in a form suitable for publishing, leading the publisher to drop it. A third coauthor was brought onboard to get the work into some semblance of being ready to publish, but no effort was made to update it with developments that had occurred in the intervening five or so years.
This explanation seems plausible, and there are certainly other examples of Beating the Winawer being somewhat out of date. The authors treatment of the Armenian Variation begins with 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.e5 c5 5.a3 Ba5 6.b4 cxd4 7.Qg4 Kf8 8.Nb5 Bb6 9.Nf3 Nc6 10.Bb2. Here Kotronias and his coauthors make no mention of 10...f6, which is one of the suggestions in April 2025 Modern Chess database
French Winawer - Play the Armenian Variation by Dreev and Basso. (This line was discussed by me, MartinC, and others in this thread
https://www.chesspub.com/cgi-bin/chess/YaBB.pl?num=1380429314).
Beating the Winawer does cover the older 10...Nge7, but even here, Dreev and Basso improve on the line presented in the book.
Finally, by a fortuitous coincidence, the latest issue of
Chess Life has a nice overview of French Winawer theory by Nikolaos Ntirlis. Among other variations, he covers the 7.h4 Winawer, showing how Black can improve on the MVL-Nepo game. He cites a 2023 correspondence game, which isn't mentioned by Kotronias and company. Instead they examine a 2020 correspondence game that ended in a draw and indicate how White could have obtained ⩲ with an improvement. That this suggestion comes on move 32 isn't entirely unusual - other variations are analyzed past move 30. Whether one regards such deep analysis as thorough or excessive may depend on one's point of view. However, it's rather moot in this case because the suggested improvement for White is evaluated as = when I check it with Stockfish. Also, in that 2020 game, Black had the option on move 18 to transpose into the 2023 game, which seems to offer a quicker and surer route to equality.
Despite its flaws,
Beating the Winawer is of considerable utility to the White player seeking to adopt 7.h4 against the Winawer. The book has a wealth of material including original analysis and covers all of Black's major attempts to counter 7.h4. The authors also examine early Black sidelines in the Winawer such as the Armenian (as indicated above), the Portisch-Hook, 6...Nc6, the Classical Winawer (6...Qc7), and 4...Qd7/4...b6. In addition, they provide nearly a hundred annotated games to illustrate typical play in the various lines. The book is more than a White repertoire - the authors also analyze less optimal White moves and show how these can be met by Black. Thus, Black players may also find useful information in this work. However, those intending to use the book should be aware of the extra work required to wrestle with its organization and to update those variations where recent theoretical developments have occurred.