Catalogue
"1.e4 e5 2.d4 exd4 3.c3, is one of the most aggressive chess openings ever devised. Dynamite was invented by a Swede, Alfred Nobel. The book you are reading now, however, was not written by Nordic players. Instead, Grandmaster Karsten Müller and FIDE Master Martin Voigt bring a touch of German method to the analysis of the explosive group of classical open games where White goes for out-and-out attack based on an early e4, d4 and Bc4, often with c2-c3 to follow.
Müller and Voigt do not confine themselves to the Danish Gambit alone but they examine a whole family of related opening variations that share some common characteristics. Most importantly, White is ready to offer some material (a pawn or two, sometimes a piece or more). White goes for the jugular and if Black is not careful he will not even reach the middle game, let alone an endgame. ...A guiding principle for the authors of this book is that White will play attacking chess, fighting for the initiative at every move. If Black does not meet the challenge in an equally determined way, he will surely lose."
From the Foreword by Tim Harding
List of Content
002 Foreword by Tim Harding
004 Introduction
005 Acknowledgements and Photo Credits
006 Signs and Symbols
008 Some Miniatures as Appetizers
014 1 Danish Gambit Accepted
083 2 Göring Gambit Accepted
130 3 Göring Gambit Accepted with 5.Bc4
133 4 Scotch Gambit Accepted
150 5 Danish Gambit Accepted
154 6 Göring Gambit Declined
157 7 Danish/Göring Gambit, Capablanca Defense
184 8 Unusual Move Orders
206 9 Lines with an early Bc4, and Urusov Gambit
224 Exercises
228 Index of variations
231 Bibliography
233 About the authors |