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For me it was Bobby Fischer teaches chess, actually ghost written by Leslie Ault. Close to no prose, just problems presented in a "programmed instruction" method. I could feel myself grow stronger from one problem to the next.
matzleeach
Maradonna
The Amateur Mind by J.Silman. I actually got two books at the same time, the 2nd was My life and games by Mikhail Tal. Both of the books and authors are well know, probably a very common choice. When I got these books I did not know much about chess, but when you start to know a little bit more about chess, you begin to know what sort of book you want next.
When it came to buying my first book/s, I decided that an instructional one (Amateurs mind) combined with a games collection (Tal's) would work as a good learning combination, and I think, for me, it worked.
The next time I buy a book/s I think I will do the same. I've got my eye on My System by Aron Nimzowitsch and Alekhine's best games. By that point I will own 4 chess books, wow! How much do you need to have before you have a library?
PawnFork
DoctorWho
Play Winning Chess, by Yasser Sierawan, was my first book. Like you, I experienced the same results via the various diagrams, exercises & tests. It really changed my mindset from how I originally approached the game. Before this book, I already knew the basics...the value of pieces & how they move, importance of pawn structure, etc., but not strategy play. Yasser Seirawan's books really contributed in educating me of the strengths and weaknesses of each piece (including the lowly pawn), and to play strong offenses, counter-plays, & sacrifices rather than defensively.
I had to learn through the actual experience of being repeatedly beat down that a good defense is a strong offense. And lastly, you can't play strictly textbook. An expert or master will already know your move before you make it.
~The Doctor
PawnForkUnited States
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by PawnFork 4 years ago
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by PawnFork 5 years ago
What was your first chess book?
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