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7 Reviews
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23 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Poor organization and editing hurt useful book,
By A Customer
This review is from: Complete Defense To Queen Pawn Openings (Cardoza Publishing's Essential Opening Repertoire Series) (Paperback)
The problem with this book is that it really seems like the author and editor didn't care about putting out a great product. There are lots of problems with this book. There are far too many typos (it's hard to edit a chess book, but come one!) and the organization is horrid. It's easy to miss crucial subvariations, and the lack of proper indexing, combined with poor organization, makes it very hard to find the game you need. Schiller's "strategic overview" in the beginning is a great idea, but it's executed poorly. A few examples concerning advancing the d-pawn here (rather than just scattered throughout the book) would work wonders. So why two stars? Well, because despite its numerous flaws, I find myself using this book a lot. There aren't any other good books on the Tarasch defense these days, and it's an excellent weapon for the club player. There is a lot of good information in here, it's just so hard tofind!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Love the Enthusiasm and Material; Hate the Proofreading,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Complete Defense To Queen Pawn Openings (Cardoza Publishing's Essential Opening Repertoire Series) (Paperback)
This is a typical Cardoza book in that editing, proofreading, and careful production were not part of the equation. I can't understand why this publisher seems to take pride in sloppy work. That out of the way...
Schiller admittedly loves to hype the things he loves, but that's fine. He is a big fan of the Tarrasch, but he backs this with solid knowledge and extensive practice, so it all works to the good. And that's the upside of Cardoza's line of books: they brim with enthusiasm, excitement, interesting ideas, and above all a philosophy of getting out there and winning. After a couple of hours with this book, you just can't wait to get out there and play and try out your new ideas. That's no small thing--- how many chess books make you want an afternoon nap instead? There are few full books to be found about the Tarrasch. Schiller's book fills a real hole. (The other book I know of is Aagaard and Lund's "Meeting 1. d4" which, while quite good, is more theoretical and dry.) Schiller definitely concentrates on ideas and typical plans and tactics for both sides. The writing style and presentation is cogent and easy to follow. You cannot get through this book without having a thorough conception of the flow of the Tarrasch. Enough material is presented on variants and alternatives to make the book a reasonable enough reference, though you might have to hunt around a bit; of course the book is not "theoretically complete" but it never seemed intended to be. As a good practical introduction, this book will have you playing the Tarrasch in tournament games rather quickly (as it is doing for me). Later on if you want to become a complete Tarrasch specialist you'll need a little more material, such as a game collection. But for getting going and learning the concepts, this book will take you quite far. You just have to grin and bear it when really obvious typos appear multiple times in one line. Overall 4 stars for content and sheer enthusiasm and energy; one star off for poor editing.
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Complete Queen's Pawn is a great place to start,
By John Prather (Orange, Texas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Complete Defense To Queen Pawn Openings (Cardoza Publishing's Essential Opening Repertoire Series) (Paperback)
After reading this book I am pretty much at ease defending the Queen pawn opening. The strategy presented here will get you through the first 10 or so moves and keep you out of trouble. After that you are of course on your own but not without some ideas and places to look for white weakness. I liked the summary of the strategy that was given in the Overview and Strategic Goals chapters. The short study of alternatives in the last few chapters is also very helpful if the game does not open exactly as planned.
1.0 out of 5 stars
A poorly executed book,
By Jim Rickman (Sudbury, MA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Complete Defense To Queen Pawn Openings (Cardoza Publishing's Essential Opening Repertoire Series) (Paperback)
The problem with any book by Eric Schiller is that he seems to bite off far more than he can chew or he presents us with superficial stuff. He also seems to have zero qualms about rehashing editing hatchet jobs on books that have been previously written by other authors (see Schiller's book on Kasparov for an example). And here, as others have observed, he quite poorly executes what could have been a good idea -- a repertoire based on the Tarrasch Defense. It's all very frustrating for those of us who wish our chess books to be to be labors of love rather than hurried projects sent to the printing press before they are ready. The Tarrasch Defense deserves far better treatment than what Schiller offers us. I don't recommend this book to anyone. For a far better repertoire book based on the Tarrasch Defense, get Jacob Aagard's "Meeting 1d4", published in 2002.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Versatile defense for black,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Complete Defense To Queen Pawn Openings (Cardoza Publishing's Essential Opening Repertoire Series) (Paperback)
This book covers the Tarrasch Defense which can be used against White's opening moves of c4,d4 and Nf3. The defense is quite sound and allows many various counterattacking and initiative advantages for Black. There is plenty of theory and analysis available for variation affecinadoes but some pawn structures available after exchanging pieces may leave some in disarray during middle and endgame play. Overall the author covers interesting lines of play and leaves the imagination and creativity to the reader. Remember, more chess play equals more experience and victory.
4 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great book on Tarrasch,
By A Customer
This review is from: Complete Defense To Queen Pawn Openings (Cardoza Publishing's Essential Opening Repertoire Series) (Paperback)
Schiller is a Tarrasch fanatic, and it shows in this thick (288 pages) well-produced epic on the Tarrasch Defence. It brims with enthusiasm and with tactics, strategies, traps, theory, history--everything you need to play and love the Tarrasch. The overview and typical strategies sections at the beginning are beautiful. Schiller does not sugarcoat this Defence, but he does promise you exciting chess and that by studying this opening your overall game will improve. It is important to learn how to play with an isolated d-pawn. Another great benefit of the Tarrasch is you can play the pawn structure against nearly any opening (even against 1. e4 you can play a French and have the same structure. Even though Kasparov gave up the Tarrasch, obviously it is a worthy opening if several world champions have played it. Solve the problem of the Bc8 being trapped in the most forthright way! Play the Tarrasch, and get this book!
6 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Awful Book Cover and Content...,
By A Customer
This review is from: Complete Defense To Queen Pawn Openings (Cardoza Publishing's Essential Opening Repertoire Series) (Paperback)
When you first see this book you figure, well the content has to be better than the cover. As amazing as it might sound, the content is even worse. The amount of errors really baffled me and stressed me out. Trying to look up things and the entire layout is just awful. How awful books like this get published is beyond my knowledge. Perhaps someone lost a bet or Schiller owns their soul. Maybe if your a 900 player this would help you break 1000. If your getting this book thinking your gonna be able to defend d4. I guess your gonna have to find out the hard way how shoddy this book is. A bad chess player that writes awful books is a scary thing. I think Ken Smith and Schiller should start their own club. Donate your money to a good charity or buy yourself something worth having. The only use this book has is the hope of being burned when no logs are left.
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Complete Defense To Queen Pawn Openings (Cardoza Publishing's Essential Opening Repertoire Series) by Eric A. Schiller (Paperback - June 1, 1998)
$16.95
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