Hansen 123
Hansen 123
Hansen 123
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Reviewed this month: for the largest selection of
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The Black Lion, in North America:
2nd Edition
by Jerry van Rekom & Leo Jansen
Scandinavian Defense,
The Dynamic 3…Qd6,
2nd Edition
by Michael Melts
Checkpoint Pirc Alert!,
2nd Edition Informant 84 (CD)
Carsten Hansen by Lev Alburt & Alexander Chernin Only $5.95!
En Passant
● Introduction (2 pages)
● Foreword to the second edition (4 pages)
● The Cub (20 pages)
● The Lion’s Den: 3…Nbd7 4 f4 e5 (36 pages)
● The Lion’s Claw: 3…Nbd7 4 Nf3 e5 (40 pages)
● The Lion’s Roar: 3…Nbd7 4 Nf3 e5 5 Bc4 (58 pages)
● The Lion’s Yawn: 3…e5 (46 pages)
● The Lion’s Mouth: 3…Nbd7 Anti-Lion System (39 pages)
● Index of Players (13 pages)
● New In Chess Code System (1 page)
● Index of Variations (6 pages)
Much has changed since the publication of the first edition. For one, the
title of the book has been modified from The Lion, The Black Weapon to
its present incarnation (apparently because there is now a White Lion
too). The material has been updated, but there is still an element of
amateurish fanaticism in the writing and the selection of the material. For
instance, in the introduction, the authors give a standard theoretical move,
6…0-0 in the Philidor, a question mark, which is ridiculous even if it
contradicts the direction the authors want to take the book. The Black
Lion, by the way, is a version of the Philidor.
With regards to the authors, Leo Jansen plays very well in many of the
games, even against strong opposition, but I have been unable to find out
his rating. Co-author van Rekom is currently rated below 2000 according
to the FIDE website, so we are talking about enthusiastic amateurs.
However, despite my reservations regarding their playing strength, the
authors make the most of strong computer engines and they are backed up
by a strong editorial team at New In Chess.
One way that this book is similar to the first edition is that the author still
seems to be trying to convince us that the opening is for real; however, we
now know that it is, so he can stop trying. The material is also presented
in the same way, with very little prose or narrative, just reams of game
fragments and analysis, almost exclusively evaluated by Informant-style
symbols, which doesn’t make for very interesting reading.
As with the first edition, the abundance of original material will take the
theory of this variation a great step further. If you play this line with
black, or 1 e4 for white, you should certainly invest in this book.
If you compare the above with the first edition, you will find that the
distribution is identical! This caused me some concern, so I checked the
index of games, which references all the games quoted in the book. I
found the only difference between the first and the second edition is a
piece of analysis from James Vigus and fourteen new games.
Furthermore, all other game references are on the same page numbers as
in the first edition. Remarkably little has changed.
On page 3 in “Note to the 2nd Edition,” Lev Alburt writes “But even
when updating Part III, which deals with current theory, I tried to
preserve Alex’s masterpiece; thus, my comments are usually in brackets.”
Thus, it would seem that Alburt updated the theoretical part without
Chernin’s involvement and he didn’t change any recommendations, he
just added a total of fifteen references across 227 pages; that is less than
one change per every ten pages. In my opinion this does not constitute a
“2nd Edition, Revised and Updated” as proclaimed on the cover.
With so few changes in the book, you would think that the additions are
quite important. Therefore, I decided to take a look at each of them.
In addition to the above examples, there are several comments and pieces
of analysis made by Alburt that clearly originate from Vigus’s book, but
are given without attribution. As a theoretical source, this book shows
signs that ninety-five percent of it was written eight years ago and that is
a shame. If you bought the first edition, do not buy this edition, it will be
an utter waste of money. However, because of the very lengthy
introduction, and the explanation of typical ideas and plans, I find this
book to be better than average as a whole.
Starting Out: The Sicilian, 2nd Edition by John Emms, Everyman Chess
2009, Figurine Algebraic Notation, Paperback, 303pp., $25.95
● Introduction (4 pages)
● The Dragon Variation (35 pages)
● The Najdorf Variation (49 pages)
● The Scheveningen Variation (28 pages)
● The Sveshnikov Variation (23 pages)
● The Classical Variation (30 pages)
● Other Open Sicilians (46 pages)
● Bb5 Systems (23 pages)
● The c3 Sicilian (24 pages)
● Other Lines (26 pages)
● Solution to Exercises (2 pages)
● Index of Variations (6 pages)
● Index of Complete Games (3 pages)
About the second edition Emms writes, “First of all I should stress that
this is still a Starting Out book, and as such I hope it will appeal to a
similar audience to those who read the first edition published in 2002.
However, in this second edition I have taken the opportunity to cover the
Sicilian more deeply, expanding on both the ideas and the theory, and
widening the coverage to include new developments (one example is the
Dragadorf Variation, see game 5) as well as less common lines which
didn’t make the first edition. So in effect, as well as Starting Out, there is
also a degree of ‘following on’. I’ve updated and expanded both the
section introductions and the illustrative games from the first edition. I’ve
also added over 20 new games, virtually all of which were played in the
new millennium. In general, I’ve chosen the games to illustrate some of
the more entertaining and instructive Sicilian battles over the years, not
always necessarily those which reflect the current state of theory (this task
is sometimes confined to the notes of games and section introductions).
All in all, the additions and amendments have resulted in a considerably
bigger book, one that’s almost twice the size (in number of words) of the
first edition.”
I find Emms to be one of the best chess book authors these days. In my
opinion, he has taken what was a rather good book to begin with and
made it absolutely excellent. The material touches all the right areas, the
annotations and introductions are well-written, the examples well-
selected, and, with the expansion of the number of pages, Emms covers
everything that is relevant in a book of this type.
For players who are beginning to learn about openings and want a good
overview of the many lines that constitute the Sicilian complex, this book
is the answer. The target audience is as high as 1900 and even stronger
players can use some of the examples to enhance their understanding of
particular lines. This is a great book.
● Contributors (2 pages)
● The Ten Best Games of the Preceding
Volume (2 pages)
● The Ten Most Important Theoretical
Novelties of the Preceding Volume (4
pages)
● System of Signs (3 pages)
● Classification of Openings (7 pages)
● A (14 + 13 pages)
● B (19 + 24 pages)
● C (15 + 14 pages)
● D (28 + 20 pages)
● E (11 + 12 pages)
● Index of Players (8 pages)
● Index of Commentators (1 page)
● Combinations (4 pages)
● Endings (6 pages)
● Studies (3 pages)
● Tournaments (16 pages)
● Modern Chess Theory (60 pages)
● The Best of Chess Informant – Khalifman (26 pages)
● Chess Informant Information (8 pages)
When I began reading through the pages of the latest volume, I quickly
discovered several changes. For instance, on page twenty-one, I found the
header “FIDE Ratings World Top 52 Players – October 2008.” Turning to
the next page I saw that section “A” also had the heading “2791-2670.”
As I put two and two together, it dawned on me that in all the games at
least one of the players were from the aforementioned list on page twenty-
one. It is only after 152 games (or fragments) that there is an introduction
by Aleksandar Matanovic:
“It was a long time ago, I had given a new volume of Chess
Informant, with 748 annotated games, to Bobby Fischer. He not
only surveyed all of them, but also noted who had annotated the
games well and who had not. He said: ‘I will annotate my games
myself in the future to show how it should be done.’
“It has not always been the way it is not – the ‘royal game’ has
become the ‘game of millions.’ A database of 3.8 million games
appeared; games played today are on the internet within hours; and
we are flooded with valuable and mundane achievements. How can
we manage all this? Which games deserve attention? Whom should
we trust? An avalanche of names and surnames! Leading chess
player enrich chess games, point to promising openings, refer to
openings ‘written off’ with concealed possibilities, discover new
ideas. Fischer never followed or studied everything, but would pick
and choose carefully. And it has always been like that – from time
immemorial.
While the new repertoire suggestions make the DVD even more attractive
to beginning or intermediate players, the presentations are very superficial
in the context of the openings as a whole. For instance, in the first new
segment under repertoire suggestions, Martin has chosen the beautiful
game Short-Fridman to showcase the Bishop’s Opening. The starting
moves were 1 e4 e5 2 Bc4 Nf6 3 d3 Nc6 4 Nf3, and Black played 4…h6.
Martin mentions 4…Be7 and 4…Bc5, but fails to mention that with
White’s fourth move, the game transposed to a Two Knights Defense, and
if Black had played 4…Bc5, he could have forced a transposition to an
Italian Game.
This DVD will provide plenty of chess entertainment for the money, but
offers very limited knowledge or information in return. The target
audience of this product is up to a rating of around 1500.
The ABC of the Ruy Lopez, 2nd Edition (DVD) by Andrew Martin,
ChessBase GmbH 2009, Figurine Algebraic Notation, $34.95