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I have that Taimanov Nimzo-Indian book in its first edition, in Russian (Fitzkultura i Sporti is the publisher, I presume). It contains a wealth of useful information indeed! I also have a very high opinion of Pliester's book, and I think it would have become a best seller had it been published by a major chess publisher... Correction to my previous post: that should read "The Ragozin Complex", of course. Somehow my brain today is stuck with this "Complete Ragozin" title, for reasons I cannot even understand! OK, so let's just clarify this with the person who started the thread: by the term "Taimanov Variation" you mean the line 4.e3 Nc6, usually followed by ...d5, intending a later ...dxc4, ...Bd6 and ...e5, right? By the way, similar positions occur also in the Queen's Gambit Accepted, in the 3.e4 Nc6 line, after a sequence such as 4.Nf3 Bg4 5.d5 Ne5 6.Bf4 Ng6 7.Be3 e5 8.Bxc4. In the Taimanov, this would arise after ...dxc4 and ...e5, and then d5 Ne7-g6. I think Barsky's coverage of this type of position is quite decent, if not too deep. I cannot say the same about Sokolov, though. He skims through this entire chapter without going to much depth, as if this line was included in his book for the sake of completeness. Don't get me wrong, 90% of the book is just fantastic, but there are a few (very few) dark spots here and there, and this is one. I also recall that this Taimanov Variation was also played occasionally by Bobby Fischer, and of course it was played by Tal several times in a world championship match of his against Botvinnik (I think it was the second, in 1961). Mark Dvoretsky had extensive analysis of the most well known Fischer game in this line, as well as some of Tal's, in an article in one of his early books (the main topic of the article was the surprising recapture on e5 with the Bd6 and not the Nc6). I suggest you try and locate this article, it showcases some very important concepts and is very educational!
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