All chess-players love to play a smooth attacking game, flowing from start to finish, and sprinkled with spectacular ideas and sacrifices. However, few can do so regularly, and for most players, their collection of brilliancies missed far outweighs their creative successes.
Innate talent plays an important role, but many of the skills needed for attacking chess can be learnt by study and practice. Here, one of the world's most experienced annotators has selected thirty superb examples, and explained them in a way that strips away the mystery. We see how the decision to attack is made, and which positional factors led to that decision being justified. We observe either a gradual build-up, or a lightning-fast storm, and understand why one approach or the other was necessary. Finally, we witness the final execution of the tactical blows.
To check that we have truly grasped the ideas, Franco presents us with plentiful exercises, where it is we who have to perform the heroics.
Zenon Franco is a grandmaster from Paraguay who now lives in Spain. He is an experienced chess trainer, his most notable pupil being Paco Vallejo, now one of the world's top grandmasters, whom he taught from 1995 to 1999. He has written four previous books for Gambit, including Chess Self-Improvement and Winning Chess Explained
004 Symbols
005 Bibliography
006 Introduction
009 1 The King in the Centre
035 2 Opposite-Side Castling
065 3 Attacking the Castled King (Same-Side Castling)
088 4 Exploiting Temporary Advantages
124 5 Horwitz Bishops
157 6 Miscellaneous Themes
157 The Power of the f5-Knight
171 Manoeuvring with the Major Pieces
183 The Pawn-Centre
199 Solutions to Exercises
253 Index of Players
255 Index of Openings |