Normal Topic Stonewall Dutch book by Nicolas Yap (Read 1292 times)
AJWZ
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Re: Stonewall Dutch book by Nicolas Yap
Reply #9 - 09/29/25 at 21:42:56
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Thank you NoNoo, I get it.
  
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Re: Stonewall Dutch book by Nicolas Yap
Reply #8 - 09/26/25 at 06:38:21
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AJWZ wrote on 09/25/25 at 13:22:57:
NoNoo wrote on 09/25/25 at 12:00:33:
Checking just the first line i think he talks about 11.a4 where i would argue that he is definitely either overreacting or engines just moved on since then. 

Yap differs earlier by not playing c6.


Thank you. You're probably right: 5 years past from the post I was referring to. Theory changed, so maybe those past problems with Stonewall aren't problems today. But what's your general opinion of the book?



i think both books serve different purposes:

Yaps book is a one stop shop. You get a full repertoire for black, not just the stonewall. This is clearly useful if you want to base everything on one book to limit the work you need to do and the sources you need to get.
But because it is a one stop shop, he a) can't go too deep, he has limited space for the repertoire and needs to prioritize which also means b) he doesn't necessarily choose the heaviest or best known lines but more practical ones. In Yaps case f.e. he goes for 3...a6 against the Tarrasch in the french part or 7...Ne4 before c6 and Qe7 against 7.b3 which are not the most common answers (and to be perfectly honest probably also not the theoretically 100% best answers), but they are very practical in a way that they go off the beaten tracks and probably get your opponent out of book. 

Sedlak on the other hand is imo the better base if you want to play the Stonewall longterm, on a higher level and you are willing to work on the opening. Of course you need to engine check every line and you will sooner or later find improvements to his lines (especially over time as we already talked about engine developments) but he offers an objectively better foundation. 


  
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Re: Stonewall Dutch book by Nicolas Yap
Reply #7 - 09/26/25 at 02:29:17
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TD wrote on 09/25/25 at 06:37:49:
You could also just read the teaser in the original link

Thanks. Of course I checked that page, but I was looking for a sample. I'm not smart enough to notice a teaser.
  
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Re: Stonewall Dutch book by Nicolas Yap
Reply #6 - 09/25/25 at 13:22:57
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NoNoo wrote on 09/25/25 at 12:00:33:
Checking just the first line i think he talks about 11.a4 where i would argue that he is definitely either overreacting or engines just moved on since then. 

Yap differs earlier by not playing c6.


Thank you. You're probably right: 5 years past from the post I was referring to. Theory changed, so maybe those past problems with Stonewall aren't problems today. But what's your general opinion of the book?
  
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Re: Stonewall Dutch book by Nicolas Yap
Reply #5 - 09/25/25 at 12:00:33
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AJWZ wrote on 09/24/25 at 09:04:12:
Hey! Delurking as I'm thinking of playing the Stonewall.
There is a new book partly on the Stonewall:
link i cant quote
Is it a good one? Are the lines chosen theoretically correct?
I read here: another link i can't quote (reply 37) about some big problems with the opening. Does he address those issues?


i think the problems mentioned in the other thread aren't that big of a deal for roughly 99.95% of all players. 
Checking just the first line i think he talks about 11.a4 where i would argue that he is definitely either overreacting or engines just moved on since then. 

Yap differs earlier by not playing c6.
  
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Re: Stonewall Dutch book by Nicolas Yap
Reply #4 - 09/25/25 at 08:43:05
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Thank you FreeRepublic Smiley I've just read about the French part of the book. I hope somebody who bought the book and has some knowledge will told us a thing or two about the Stonewall part of the book. 2 books in  1 big book is great, providing the contents are great Wink
  
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Re: Stonewall Dutch book by Nicolas Yap
Reply #3 - 09/25/25 at 06:37:49
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You could also just read the teaser in the original link...

https://thinkerspublishing.com/product/a-complete-opening-repertoire-for-black-a...
  
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Re: Stonewall Dutch book by Nicolas Yap
Reply #2 - 09/25/25 at 00:50:16
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FreeRepublic wrote on 09/24/25 at 19:13:52:
For some reason, I can't get the sample pages from Forwardchess today

As usual, niggemann.com is a good resource, sample pages here:
https://www.niggemann.com/en/complete-opening-repertoire-for-black-after-1-e6.ht...

Edited:
I couldn't get the forwardchess.com sample to load either. But clicking on the Table of Contents button works and, based on the available (highlighted) links, it looks to be the same sample as at niggemann.com.
  
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Re: Stonewall Dutch book by Nicolas Yap
Reply #1 - 09/24/25 at 19:13:52
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It's also available at Forwardchess.com:

https://forwardchess.com/product/a-complete-opening-repertoire-for-black-after1....

For some reason, I can't get the sample pages from Forwardchess today. Anyone else having that problem?

I recall that this book was mentioned in the forum when someone wanted a line to match the French. Here, you get two books in one! 510 pages.

NM Tillis at Chessable had a similar idea, matching the French with the Queen's Gambit Declined.

I don't have this book by Nicolas Yap, or any of his books. I can't even see the sample pages usually available at Forwardchess. There are five reviews at Forwardchess, but they are currently not available to me. 4 out of 5 stars.
  
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Stonewall Dutch book by Nicolas Yap
09/24/25 at 09:04:12
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Hey! Delurking as I'm thinking of playing the Stonewall.
There is a new book partly on the Stonewall:
https://thinkerspublishing.com/product/a-complete-opening-repertoire-for-black-a...
Is it a good one? Are the lines chosen theoretically correct?
I read here: https://www.chesspub.com/cgi-bin/chess/YaBB.pl?num=1591883528/37 (reply 37) about some big problems with the opening. Does he address those issues?
  
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