Descripción
Better Thinking, Better Chess: How a Grandmaster Finds his Moves Finding strong moves doesn’t simply depend on how much you know about chess. In fact, greater conceptual knowledge
makes choosing a move more complex as it increases the number of directions your mind can take. More important is optimizing your thought process.
Better Thinking, Better Chess
Grandmaster Joel Benjamin knows that pointing out the moves his students missed is just half the job. They need to understand that they were looking in the wrong direction.
How a Grandmaster Finds his Moves Finding strong moves
Chess engines offer little help in this because they can’t explain why you went astray. What’s more: an engine may send the wrong message! Many chess players don’t realise that the top
computer move frequently isn’t the best move to play during the game.
This book will improve the structure and effectiveness of your decision making process. You will learn to:
— choose between two attractive continuations
— avoid taking the wrong direction at the start of your deliberations
— know when it is necessary to spend more time
— recognize unlikely moves
— understand when you need to sacrifice material
— and much more.
By applying a grandmaster’s train of thought you will more often arrive at strong moves and substantially improve your game.
At thirteen years of age Joel Benjamin broke Bobby Fischer’s record as the youngest ever US master. He won the US Championship three times and was the chess consultant for IBM’s Deep
Blue computer, which made history by beating World Champion Garry Kasparov in an epic encounter. He has been teaching chess for many years. His previous book Liquidation on the Chess
Board won the 2015 Best Book Award of the Chess Journalists of America (CJA).
Excerpt
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