JEH wrote on 09/27/16 at 05:48:29:
"The Fianchetto Solution
A Complete, Solid and Flexible Chess Opening Repertoire"
I would take issue with "complete", "solid" and "repertoire" in that sentence. It is definitely about chess though.
Complete: I fear not. I’m no expert on the Modern but I did take quite a close look at the ... Nc6 anti-Austrian variation a few years back.
5 Bb5 is surprisingly annoying. Surprising to me, at least, but probably it shouldn’t have been. White is just trying to do to Black - exchange light-squared bishop for a knight to aid control of d4 - what Black is trying to do to White a lot of the time.
5 Bb5 is not mentioned at all in TFS.
Possibly I’m missing it - see earlier comments - but I"m not sure
1 e4 g6, 2 d4 Bg7, 3 c4 d6, 4 Nf3 is covered either.
Those two examples, and the fact that the entire Pirc Austrian Attack is covered in 2.5 pages, lead me to suspect the coverage is not at all "complete".
It does have lines for both Black and White, mind.
Solid I’m not sure that you can fairly accuse the Modern of being a solid opening. The
... Nc6 lines especially so. I don’t see this as a drawback, necessarily.
Flexible Yes - lots of lines presented and often various choices (ironically this is often because one of the authors doesn’t think the main suggestion is at all solid).
Repertoire I remember reading people describing
The Flexible French as a repertoire book despite the fact that it clearly wasn’t by any traditional or meaningful definition of the term. But it said so on the back cover so that’s what they said.
TFS is not a repertoire book in the sense that it says, "in this position play this line, in that position play that line ....". Often a number of choices are presented as noted above, but that does have a knock-on impact on how extensive the coverage can be.
Also, the thing that appealed most to me - the reason why I bought the book - is that it’s not just about variations. There’s the attempt to look at common themes in the "Strategic Motif" sections and the exercises at the end of each chapter/sub-section.
TFS is not a repertoire book. Again, i don’t see that as a drawback.