katar wrote on 04/18/14 at 02:13:35:
There's that word again, "best." I own and have studied exactly zero of the masterworks in the canon identified by Keano. Should I consider an opening book "best" if I haven't seen it or if I don't care about the subject opening? I have found some books very useful that I would not describe as "best"-- e.g., Taylor's Slay the Sicilian is the only game in town on Be2 Sicilians for White. There is also a continuum of practical/didactic vs. authoritative and one quality usually comes at the expense of the other. Can we say McDonald:How to Beat 1e4 is better or worse than Emanuel Berg's new two-volume set? It obviously depends on one's purpose. Still another quality relates to the personal inventions of the author-- a few that score highly on that scale are Tiger's Modern; Chigorin Acc. to Morozevich; Play 1b3 by Odessky; Kindermann's Leningrader System; and Esserman's Mayhem in the Morra.
So anyway. Here are ten books that: (1) I happily own; (2) I have played thru in large part; and (3) left me with a favorable impression. Obviously not an optimal pool but it's the one I'm workin with.
Chess Advantage in Black & White - Kaufman
Playing 1d4: QG & Indian Defences - Schandorff
Mastering the Nimzo-Indian - Kosten
Play the Open Games - Emms
Fundamental Chess Openings - van der Sterren
Chigorin Acc. to Morozevich
Beating Unusual 1e4 Defences - Greet
Kill KID - Semkov
Berlin Wall - Cox
Gambit Repertoire for Black - Schiller
I don't own Avrukh/Marin/Scherbakov but I am sure they are wonderful.
Agree, ultimately its subjective, but its fun making a list
Of the ones you mentioned there a few came very close to making my list as well, some of my favourite books:
Chigorin Acc. to Morozevich
Play 1b3 by Odessky
Kindermann's Leningrad System
Beating Unusual 1e4 Defences - Greet
Also I was very unhappy to not have space to include Simon Williams (2003). Play The Classical Dutch