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BCM Chess Book Reviews : August 2000

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Archangel and New Archangel by Krzysztof Panczyk with John Emms, Everyman, 160 pages, £12.99. Archangel and New Archangel

Sub-titled “Two Dynamic Systems to Counter the Ruy Lopez”, the main ‘Archangel’ part of the book (covering 1 e4 e5 2 Nf3 Nc6 3 Bb5 a6 4 Ba4 Nf6 5 0-0 b5 6 Bb3 Bb7) is by IM Panczyk, while GM Emms has contributed the two chapters on the ‘New Archangel’ (6...Bc5) and the Møller variation (5...Bc5). There is a considerable degree of overlap between these systems (which may have contributed to the comment in the blurb that the New Archangel is “also known as the Møller”).

The book has been typeset by Gambit Publications and laid out as a tree of analysis within chapters, with some textual explanations. Panczyk and Emms have assembled a welter of information about these interrelated systems which will prove invaluable to those who play them, perhaps less so to those thinking about taking them up.





   

Vienna Game by Gary Lane, Everyman, 144 pages, £14.99. The Vienna Game - Lane

The Vienna Game is one of those openings with a long history which comes into fashion from time to time, but has always been popular at club level. 1...e5 players seldom spend much time preparing against this opening when the Ruy Lopez and others are more often met; so it has the advantage of surprise more often than not. Another advantage is its variety, with both tactical and strategic possibilities. It has had adherents at high levels (Adams, Short, Spassky), though Kasparov has never given it his mark of approval. As regards design, the book is well up to Everyman’s usual standard, despite a gremlin creeping into the cover verso page accrediting the book to Glenn Flear rather than the actual author. Gary Lane has produced an up-to-date and well-organised volume, using the familiar Everyman game by game format, and it is written in an easy-going, anecdotal style with a good balance between textual commentary and lines of analysis.




 

Action Chess by Cecil Purdy, Thinker’s Press, 192 pages, £15.99. Action Chess

This book is taken from a series of Cecil Purdy’s articles for Chess World in the 1950s entitled The Openings in Ten Hours. As ever Purdy is a lucid author with great insight into his material. The publishers have added a contemporary running commentary beside Purdy’s text on every page which is sometimes useful but occasionally annoying. It also makes for quite a lot of white space. But Purdy’s original text has been left alone, and this makes for a worthwhile and well-written general guide to opening play.







 
 

The Art of the King’s Indian by Eduard Gufeld, Batsford, 221 pages, £14.99. The Art of the Kings Indian - Gufeld

Despite the title, this is not so much a pure openings or repertoire book, but more a collection of annotated King’s Indian Defence games. There are 83 in total, mainly recent, with 53 of them played by the author. Grandmaster Gufeld is an acknowledged KID expert and the book is imbued with his long experience of the opening, and close personal acquaintance with many of the big name KID players. His style is endearingly egocentric and anecdotal, but his thoughts, ideas and recommendations on the King’s Indian are authoritative and expressed pungently. Incidentally Batsford have upgraded their standard cover from its former unattractive black and white livery to a vivid new rainbow design. All in all, an excellent book, and one of the most readable openings primers for years.







 

The Chess Monthly, Volume 4, September 1882 - August 1883, Moravian Chess, 382 pages, £23.50. Chess Monthly Vol. 4

The September 1882 issue informed visitors to Hastings that they would find the newly-established Chess Club at the Seaside Hotel on Friday afternoons. There is further wrangling between Steinitz and both Zukertort and Mason over proposed matches. The year starts with reflections of the great Vienna tournament of 1882 and year ends with Zukertort’s win in the London tournament of 1883.









 

Brooklyn Chess Chronicle, Volume 4, October 1885 - September 1886, Moravian Chess, 190 pages, £19.99. Brooklyn Chronicle Vol. 4

The fourth volume of the Brothers Muñoz’s estimable periodical. During the period of this volume, the great Steinitz-Zukertort match was unfolding in the USA. The magazine reflects the breathless rapture caused by this long-awaited clash: “Extra – as we go to press the telegraph informs us that the third game of the great match proved a victory for Mr. Zukertort. Excitement increases. Hall filled to overflow.”









 

American Chess Bulletin, Volume 30 (1933), Moravian Chess, 184 pages, £19.50.

Helms describes how the first FIDE President, Dr. Rueb, “devoted eight years of unselfish, altruistic endeavour to the establishment and upbuilding of an official body which shall promote and regulate chess interests throughout the world.” Elsewhere, ACB quoted Koltanowski’s The Chess World about Pirc, who had just finished second at Hastings: “Vlasimir Pirc is a pleasant young fellow, but rather shy (so the girls at the New Year’s Eve dance at Hastings said)... his standing grief at Hastings was that everybody insisted upon pronouncing his name Peerk, whereas it should be pronounced Peerts”.



 

American Chess Bulletin, Volume 32 (1935), Moravian Chess, 180 pages, £19.50.

There was a lot of chess news in 1935: America celebrated its third successive Olympiad success in Warsaw, and Reshevsky triumphed ahead of Capablanca at Margate. The death of Nimzowitsch was mourned. And finally, Euwe became world champion. Many photographs, most of which have reproduced rather better than in previous volumes of this series.



 

The Chess Player’s Chronicle, Volume 8, 1847, Moravian Chess, 429 pages, £23.99.ChessChronicle

Another ample helping of Victorian chess as published by Howard Staunton, replete with games and numerous reports of chess association gatherings. That of the London Chess Club was notable for the attendance of St Amant as well as all the British notables, including Staunton, with the prospect of another match between the top players of Britain and France being greeted with cheering and applause. There is a brief obituary of Deschapelles. Von der Lasa contributes a piece on “chess in Hamburgh and Altona.” All in all, a vibrant and informative journal, packed with interest.








 

The Munich ‘Olympiad’ 1936, Edited by AJ Gillam, The Chess Player, 126 pages, £12.00.

Tony Gillam has collected the game scores of the ‘Olympiad that was not an Olympiad’: Munich 1936, which was not organised by FIDE but by the German government to run alongside the 1936 Olympic Games. The book is not concerned with the politics but confines itself to the 612 games and part-games, a few of which are annotated in Informator style. It should be noted that this is by no means all of the games of the competition; the book points out that 1680 were played. The editor intends to gather in any games which are subsequently traced and publish them via their web site.



 

GM-RAM by Rashid Ziyatdinov, Thinker’s Press, 151 pages, £14.95. GM-RAM

There was a rather lame joke popular amongst schoolboy chess-players that someone should write a book entitled “How To Win At Chess” with just three solitary words on a single page inside it: “Checkmate your opponent.” This book comes close. It consists of 256 positions and 59 classic games with no clues, hints, solutions or analysis – not even who is to move. So the reader has to do all the work to find out what is supposed to happen in each position and game. The author’s opinion is that if all the positions and games are memorised, the reader will have the ‘Random Access Memory’ (RAM) of a 2600 player. Really?









 

 


 

Just in...

Batsford’s Modern Chess Openings, 14th ed, £19.99
Same content and price as the McKay edition as reviewed in BCM, April 2000...


Grandmaster Chess School St Petersburg: Opposite-Coloured Bishop Endgames by Evgeny Solozhenkin, Chessbase CD ROM: £18.50.


 

All Reviews by John Saunders

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