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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent for Beginning Players, January 23, 2003
I used "An Invitation to Chess" when I taught a grade school course in chess fundamentals. Of all the chess books I have seen geared purely toward the beginner, I found this to be the clearest, best organized, and, just as the subtitle claims, it is "A Picture Guide to The Royal Game."

Lots of pictures help explain the moves and motions of a piece in the context of a larger strategy. Chernev and Harkness used photos of the board as well as standard board drawings. They require modernized, as the photos are a bit blurry, and the drawings have an old newspaper keyline look. The copy is succinct, but not dry. As a reader, I found it less clinical than many of the chess books with dozens of lines per opening.

This is a long way from anything Lasker or Fischer wrote, but the audience intended here is looking to play the game effectively, unworried about becoming a grandmaster. At least, not yet.

The content list breaks things down to subsections like "How the King Moves and Captures," and "How the Pawn Captures 'en passant.''" They provide a special section cautioning the new player of common mistakes, like "Premature Attacks," and "Pawn Grabbing with the Queen." This is invaluable because young players routinely shoot for point control over game control.

I fully recommend "An Invitation to Chess" by Irving Chernev and Kenneth Harkness. Use this to teach your children, or use it to study up when they start to beat you.

Anthony Trendl
http://anthonytrendl.com
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Single best choice for beginners, November 28, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: An Invitation to Chess (Paperback)
Though this book is getting a bit old, a better beginners book has yet to be written. Getting into the habit of asking yourself "what does he threaten?" is crucial to the beginning player. They really should update it to algebraic.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great For Newcomers, April 13, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: An Invitation to Chess (Paperback)
When I first learned the rules of the game, I found this book to be of great value, if only for the simple advice of "always ask yourself why your opponent played a certain move. What does he attack?" and "before your make your move, ask yourself what your opponent's best reply would be." You can find more comprehensive books, but this is my choice for a useful, friendly, quick guide to better chess. I'd buy this for a younger player or newcomer in a heartbeat. Why intimidate someone with a huge tome when you can painlessly improve with this volume?
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars BEST chess book!, January 2, 2009
By 
This review is from: An Invitation to Chess: A Picture Guide to the Royal Game (Paperback)
If you are not yet an expert chess player, this is the book for you. I hesitate to say it is for beginners (though it is the best book for beginners) but it is also for anyone who is not yet an expert, or has not read (and understood) dozens of other chess books. I have played chess for years, but not in competitions or another serious environments - so I can beat any other bad player, but get crushed by experts. Looking for a chess book, I found two types: (1) one that explains how to move the pieces, and nothing more, or (2) so complex by chapter 2 that I could not understand it. This book is simply fantastic, and GREATLY improved my play before I was even halfway through the book. I can't recommend it enough for beginners and anyone who hasn't read (and understood) a bunch of "expert" level books.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best books to start with, April 5, 2006
By 
This is an excellent book to start with for the beginners.To study the games You do not need a chess board or chessmen to follow. the games are presented in a contineous flow of diagrams move after move to study .The language is free flowing,clear,and attractive(interesting) .I gave this book away to my sister for her use and she spoiled it.Now I imported a book from abebooks(UK)for more serious study.You can learn a lot from it.One particular set of advise for all playersIn the beginning stage of training or study is the paragraph on page 111- "what does he threaten?"When it is your turn to move ...(before)moving a piece to a particular square you must look before where you leaps, try to discover the plan of your opponent.There is an example of this principle by an illustrated chess game with move by move comment There are many valuable advise and examples given for new comers and beginners.This is one of my extremely valuable asset and also for other chess book collectors' libray.I love this book very much.
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the book taught me the basics, June 15, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: An Invitation to Chess (Paperback)
this book helped me go from a person not caring about chess to now being a very big part of my off duty time i take my magnetic set with me to all my appointments or anywhere i might have a waiting period,i get valuable time on my set and i also refer to the games in the book and try to learn from the great games illustrated in the book ,now i am trying to teach my family and friends how to play ,i am 30 yrs old if i had learned when i was younger i would be who knows,playing deep blue in a series :) ,i dream big . i also beat my friend i have been only playing for 1 year and he has been for 8years or more ,but he told me that i will never beat him in chess ,i love when someone tells me i am never going to do something i stayed with what i learned in the book and he underestimated my abilities and the day i beat him i will never forget the surprised look he had on his face. since then i have won matches 3 to be exact and counting i hope i can get more training from on line because i will be better than him or at least get to the point where we are splitting games, he has alot of chess books and he knows i am closing the gap real fast and i like the fact that he opened me up to this wonderful game.
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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the book taught me the basics, June 15, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: An Invitation to Chess (Paperback)
this book helped me go from a person not caring about chess to now being a very big part of my off duty time i take my magnetic set with me to all my appointments or anywhere i might have a waiting period,i get valuable time on my set and i also refer to the games in the book and try to learn from the great games illustrated in the book ,now i am trying to teach my family and friends how to play ,i am 30 yrs old if i had learned when i was younger i would be who knows,playing deep blue in a series :) ,i dream big . i also beat my friend i have been only playing for 1 year and he has been for 8years or more ,but he told me that i will never beat him in chess ,i love when someone tells me i am never going to do something i stayed with what i learned in the book and he underestimated my abilities and the day i beat him i will never forget the surprised look he had on his face. since then i have won matches 3 to be exact and counting i hope i can get more training from on line because i will be better than him or at least get to the point where we are splitting games, he has alot of chess books and he knows i am closing the gap real fast and i like the fact that he opened me up to this wonderful game.
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An Invitation to Chess: A Picture Guide to the Royal Game
An Invitation to Chess: A Picture Guide to the Royal Game by Irving Chernev (Paperback - March 6, 2008)
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