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Forcing Chess Moves
Titel: Forcing Chess Moves
Auteur: Hertan
Uitgever: New in chess
Jaartal: 2008
Taal: Engels
Aantal pagina's:   382
Verkoopprijs:   € 24.95
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Why is it that the human brain so often refuses to consider winning chess tactics?

Every chess fan marvels at the wonderful combinations with which famous masters win games. How do they find those fantastic moves? Do they have a special vision? And why do computers outwit us tactically?

This rich book on chess tactics proposes a revolutionary method for finding winning moves. Charles Hertan has made an astonishing discovery: the failure to consider key moves is often due to human bias. Your brain tends to disregard many winning moves because they are counter-intuitive or look unnatural.

We can no longer deny it, computers outdo us humans when it comes to tactical vision and brute force calculation. So why not learn from them? Charles Hertan's radically different approach is: use COMPUTER EYES and always look for the most forcing sequence first!

By studying forcing moves according to Hertan's method you will:

  • develop analytical precision
  • improve your tactical vision
  • overcome human bias and staleness
  • enjoy the calculation of difficult positions

Charles Hertan is a FIDE master from Massachusetts with several decades of experience as a chess coach. Instead of rehashing the usual classic examples he has unearthed hundreds of instructive combinations which appear here for the first time in print.

Foreword
by three-time US Champion Joel Benjamin

The study of tactics holds a necessary place in the regimen of players of all levels. One can find explanation of fundamental tactical elements - pins, skewers, forks, etc. - in a host of books, but the process of finding the killer moves is still rather mysterious.

Hertan's work calls to mind the underdog success story of Van Perlo's Endgame Tactics. The little-known Dutch correspondence grandmaster compiled positions for thirty years until he produced a masterpiece which took the English Chess Federa­tion's Book of the Year honors in 2006.

Hertan, a FIDE Master living near Boston, has spent a comparatively small but still impressive fourteen years researching, organizing, and codifying 650 tactical posi­tions of all varieties. Like Van Perlo, Hertan has unearthed a multitude of positions appearing in print for the first time. I have a feeling that Hertan's opus, like Van Perlo's, will be warmly received.

In my lectures I have occasionally explored the demands of solving complex problems at the chessboard. Hertan has done so here on a grander scale with the aid of the useful concept of

'computer eyes'.
From my experience working at IBM on the Deep Blue team, I know that computers can find strong moves that humans over­look because they appear too outrageous to consider. It is a sign of the growth of computers that the term 'computer move', which once was assigned to an ugly and pitiful move, is now used to connote a strong but surprising move computers are better equipped to identify.

But my own human travails suffice to bring Hertan's idea close to heart. In many of my games I have discovered astonishing moves and combinations that seemed (to me, if not the spectators) to fall out of the sky.

Yet there is a thought process behind every great chess move, and by organizing and explaining the nature of these magic moves, Hertan has brought us all closer to being able to find them.

Content:
007 Foreword

011 Introduction

016 How to Use this Book

017 Chapter 1 - Stock Forcing Moves

59 Exercises

065 Chapter 2 - Stock Mating Attacks

101 Exercises

103 Chapter 3 - Brute Force Combinations

127 Exercises

135 Chapter 4 - Surprise Forcing Moves

155 Exercises

165 Chapter 5 - Equal or Stronger Threats

181 Exercises

189 Chapter 6 - Quiet Forcing Moves

205 Exercises

215 Chapter 7 - Forcing Retreats

233 Exercises

241 Chapter 8 - Zwischenzugs

261 Exercises

269 Chapter 9 - Defensive Forcing Moves

287 Exercises

295 Chapter 10 - Endgame Forcing Moves

319 Exercises

327 Chapter 11 - Intuition and Creativity

349 Chapter 12 - Various Exercises

367 Afterthought

369 Explanation of Symbols

370 Glossary of Terms

376 Index of Names






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