Publisher: Labate Chess, 2008 Edition: Paperback medium Pages: 328 Language: English
New algebraic edition!
Any chess enthusiast knows how important tactics are in chess and how crucial it is to make a thorough study of this aspect of the game. But up to now opinion has been divided on the best way of studying tactics.
The well-known Soviet international grandmaster and chess author Averbakh has developed an entirely novel approach, which is expounded in the third edition of his Chess Tactics for Advanced Players.
Averbakh begins by examining the simplest situations resulting from confrontations between different pieces. He then proceeds to analyze more complex situations and demonstrates the importance of the double attack.
With instructive examples he proves that double attacks in the broadest sense are the basis of most tactical operations. This discovery prompted Averbakh to focus his attention on the double attack in the first part of the book.
The second part is devoted to combinations. The author delves into the question of what lies hidden behind the mysterious concept of harmony of pieces.
The astonishing simplicity of the answer he finds to this question enables him to reduce the bulk of the combinations to a handful of basic elements.
From this Averbakh derives a convincing definition of the term 'combination' and introduces a new, promising system of classifying different combinations.
All this is explained with the aid of numerous practical examples including complete games and chess problems. The book contains special chapters with numerous exercise problems for the reader to test and consolidate his newly-acquired skill.
In this way Averbakh's work is both very instructive and easy to understand.
IM Jeremy Silman: "One of the best ever books on this subject. If you enjoy studying combinations and tactics, and if you want to improve your strength in these two areas, then this is the book for you!"
IM Malcolm Pein: "It was the first book that I ever read that truly dissected what makes a tactic. I still go back to it from time to time."
Bernard Cafferty, British Chess Magazine: "Simply excellent; a well-strructured work replete with diagrams, classified into instructive sections which simplify the thinking patterns of the experienced master."