POPULAR CHESS OPENINGS
The Veresov Attack
Winning Against Flank Openings
The Aggressive Nimzowitsh Sicilian
Play the Sicilian Defense: Winning Against 1. e4
The Englund Gambit and the Blackburne-Hartlaub Gambit Complex
Beating the Ruy Lopez with the Fianchetto Variation
Franco-Benoni Defenses
Winning with the Benko Gambit
Comprehensive Coverage of the Long-Established Main Line of the Nimzo
The Nimzo-Indian - 4. e3
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The Lisitsin Gambit
A Black Defensive System with 1... d6
Beating the Alekhine Defense with the Exchange Variation
The Goring Gambit Accepted and Declined
Winning with the English Defense
Play the Nimzo-Bogo Indians - Winning Against 1. d4
1d4 Nf6 2 c4 d6 3 Nc3 Bf5
Janowski - Indian Defence
Surprise Your Opponents with the Tricky 2. Nc3!
The Veresov
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Winning with the Hypermodern
Blackmar-Diemer Gambit Bogoljubow Variation
Who's Afraid of the King's Gambit - 3RD EDITION
Queen's Gambit Declined - Orthodox Variation
Gruenfeld Defense Russian Variations
How to Play the the Dilworth Attack
Publisher: ISHI Press
Author: Eric Schiller
Year of Publication: 2012 (Reprint) Pages: 160
Notation Type: Algebraic (AN)
Book Description At the time of the first edition, this opening was just becoming popular in Grandmaster chess. It soon became a hot item and for this edition we had over 20,000 games in our database. Champions of the defense include Grandmasters Agdestein, Dolmatov, Gleizerov (more than 100 games!), Glek, Karlsson, Moskalenko, Nikolic, Ulibin, and Vaisser. The theory is now pretty well established. I recommend that you start by studying the Overview below and looking at the games cited in the next paragraphs. I have concentrated on the lines most frequently seen in high level games. The opening is so absurdly transpositional that there is no way to organize it exhaustively. The most important thing is to note where the pieces usually land. About the Author(s) Eric Schiller (born March 20, 1955 in New York City) is an American chess player, trainer, arbiter and one of the most prolific authors of books on chess in the 20th century. In 1974, Schiller was the Illinois Junior Champion. Schiller played for the University of Chicago team several times at the Pan American Intercollegiate Team Chess Championship. He was an organizer of the Hawaii International chess festivals 1994-98 including 1998 US Open California Champion 1995. Later that year, he appeared as a chess adviser for the music group Phish on some of the stops for their "Chess Tour" where they played an ongoing game of two chess moves per tour stop and some "band vs. audience" partial games as part of their stage performance. Schiller was an arbiter at several notable games and championships including the FIDE World Chess Championship 2000. While Vladimir Kramnik and Garry Kasparov opted not to participate in the event, they had both endorsed Schiller for this sensitive role during the planning stages. As of April 2009, Schiller has a FIDE rating of 2166. He is also an International Arbiter and International Trainer. Schiller's expertise and publications in the Flohr-Zaitsev Variation made him a sought-after expert when Gary Kasparov used that opening at the second game at the World Chess Championship 1990.
Modern Stonewall Dutch
Mission - Checkmate! with the Blackmar-Diemer Gambit
Standing Up to the Trompowski - Chess Lecture - Volume 23
How to Face Unorthodox Openings - Chess Lecture - Volume 15
An Opening Repertoire for the Attacking Player Part I - Sicilian vs. 1.e4 - Chess Lecture - Volume 16
An Answer to the Scandinavian Defense - Chess Lecture - Volume 18
How to Win Against 1.d4 Using the Noteboom Variation - Chess Lecture - Volume 25
My Pet King's Indian, Na6 - Chess Lecture - Volume 28
A Poisonous System Against the KID Fianchetto - Chess Lecture - Volume 29
A Simple System Against the King's Gambit - Part I - Chess Lecture - Volume 34
Win Against Any King Pawn Opening!
Complete Defense to King Pawn Openings
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