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There are to be Grandmaster Repertoire books on a 1. e4 repertoire in the future. But I think there have not many 1. e4 repertoire books as much as 1. d4 or 1. c4/1. Nf3 since playing 1. e4 is generally sharper and probably requires more learning of theory to attempt to claim an advantage in the opening. For example, I am unsure exactly how much theory one would have to learn to play 6. Bg5 against the Najdorf in 2012, but I am sure that it would be a very substantial amount. And in addition to 6. Bg5, one needs to learn a line against all of the other Sicilians to try for an opening advantage. And then of course the Spanish, Caro Kann, French, Petroff... A book on 1. e4 against the Najdorf using 6. Bg5 in 2012 would probably be 300 pages long. Although not a repertoire book, there was a book in the 1990s that covered completely 6. Bg5 Najdorf, and I still remember whilst reading it that it was quite a dense book. A book against the Spanish playing the main line (then Breyer, Karpov, Keres, Zaitsev, Arkhangelsk, Neo-Arkhangelsk, Chigorin, Open Spanish, Marshall Gambit, Berlin Defence, Schliemann, Steinitz, Classical, etc.) would probably require 400 pages.
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