See bigger image
here.
ISBN (10 digits): 1 904600 67 0
ISBN
(13 digits): 978-1-904600-67-1 |
THE RUY LOPEZ: A GUIDE FOR BLACK (Sverre Johnsen & Leif
Johannessen) 208 pages (248 mm by 172
mm). £16.99/$28.95/26,50
The Ruy Lopez (or Spanish Opening) is one of the critical
chess battlegrounds. It has long been recommended as an excellent chess opening
for training purposes, as it leads to a wide variety of structures and
strategies. This book is a complete guide to handling the black side of the
Lopez, based principally around the Zaitsev Variation, upon which Anatoly
Karpov relied during much of his career. This line leads to sharp play, often
in open battles where Black gains active counterplay and challenges White to
seize the initiative on the kingside. The authors explain in detail how Black
can weather the storm. They also explain how Black can handle the practical
problem of the Ng5 repetition, and recommend reliable procedures against
White's other options in the Lopez, starting off with the Exchange Variation,
and moving on to a variety of closed systems. Throughout, the emphasis is on
what readers actually need to know and understand in order to play the opening
successfully in practice. There is a great deal of explanation of important
ideas, and the authors take pains to guide their readers away from potential
pitfalls.
Sverre Johnsen is a FIDE-rated player from Norway. He
is an enthusiastic chess analyst, researcher and writer, and co-author of Win with the London System, one of the most popular
openings books of recent years. He is also co-author, with Ivar Bern and Simen
Agdestein, of Win with the Stonewall Dutch.
Leif Johannessen is a young grandmaster, also from Norway. He plays in
several national leagues and has represented his country in many team events.
The quality of his opening preparation is shown by the fact that he won the
prize for most important theoretical novelty in Informator 92.
Download a pdf file with a
sample from the book.
Visit Sverre Johnsen's website,
Sverre's Chess
Corner.
"I particularly enjoyed Johannessen's preface... many useful
tips are presented for players over 1600. The research and analysis are first
rate and current. A well written and well-researched book" - Lou Mercuri,
Chess Horizons
"I especially found Leif's preface fascinating and the book
is arguably worth reading just for his 12 step guide to adopting new openings."
- Jonathan Grant, Scottish Chess magazine
"Good chess opening books are all about 'feel' - do you feel
the authors are making you at home in the variation, do you feel they are
giving up their 'secrets' to you, the reader, and do you get the feeling they
are on your side? Well, this book scores very highly in this respect, take the
Preface, for example. It's a 15 page discussion by GM Johannessen on how to
learn a chess opening (albeit aimed at the Zaitsev, but the lessons are
universal) - and it does the subject matter wonderful justice. I've read
magazine and internet articles which do not come close to Johannessen's logical
explanation of taking an opening from a thought over a coffee at a chess
bookstall to a full part of your tournament repertoire. For my money, the best
part of the book, although the rest of the material doesn't lag behind in
quality." - Munroe Morrison, Open File
"A great book by two great authors!" - GM Simen
Agdestein, Verdens Gang
"An interesting debut book by the two Norwegian authors." -
GM Peter Heine Nielsen, Skakbladet
"A great book for anyone who plays or wishes to take up the
black side of this wonderful and instructive opening. If you are not
comfortable playing this opening, often don't know what to do, or are simply
looking for more ideas, this is one book you need." - Andy May,
www.nsgchess.com
"The book is amazingly thorough, with ample amounts of
properly referenced analysis, suggestions, and improvements over existing
theory, loads of original analysis, and plenty of explanatory prose to support
the variations. The author provides detailed descriptions of the strategies and
long-term plans for both sides. Moreover, the illustrative games are expertly
annotated and provide further material for the student to gain an understanding
of the opening. I highly recommend this book to players who are serious about
their opening repertoires and about improving their overall game." - Carsten
Hansen, ChessCafe.com
"The main body of the book is a repertoire book based on the
Closed Ruy Lopez, offering Black some alternative lines from move nine onwards,
and of course providing coverage of lines where White diverges first (e.g. the
Exchange Lopez). The two authors provide plenty of textual material, delivered
with style and humour. ... these two authors are engaging chess writers with a
style of their own. The book is excellent and deserves to sell well." - John
Saunders, BCM
"We are told that Johannessen was far from being an expert
in playing the black side of the Lopez, but was planning to take it up!
Furthermore he has tried to turn this negative into a positive, writing in his
own Preface: 'In order to use my lack of experience with the Ruy Lopez in a
constructive way, I would like to share with the readers how I prepared the
opening while writing the book. The process was quite similar to what I would
have done if I were to prepare the Closed Ruy Lopez only for myself.' I notice
that he has been practising what he preached - in the database there are now
some games of his on the black side of the Spanish. Johannessen's preface
actually covers 15 pages and, if not quite 'worth the price of the book alone',
as they say, it is certainly a very useful essay on how to choose and prepare
an opening for serious use, in twelve steps. ... A very good opening book.
Readers will learn a lot about the Closed Lopez, and therefore about chess,
even if they never play the Zaitsev! Highly recommended." - Phil Adams,
3Cs website
"The two Norwegian chess cracks GM Leif Johannessen and the
openings theoretician Sverre Johnsen concentrate in this latest Gambit
repertoire book on the black side of the Zaitsev variation of the Ruy Lopez.
... A very important reference book on the Zaitsev variation!" - John
Elburg, chessbooks.nl |