Questions of Modern Chess Theory is the lost masterpiece of Soviet chess literature. It was written by a double Ukrainian Champion, and published in the Soviet Union in 1956. Russian experts say it is one of the most important chess books of the 20th century, yet it has never been published in English, so only those few westerners who understood Russian, like Bobby Fischer, had the chance to read it. Questions of Modern Chess Theory has been edited to make it useful for the 21st century and is now accessible for the first time to an English-speaking audience.
Isaac Lipnitsky was a major player on the Soviet chess scene just after World War Two, strong enough to take the scalps of Keres, Smyslov and Petrosian. He would no doubt have been a household name had he not tragically passed away at a young age in 1959.
This is the missing link between Nimzowitsch"es My System and chess today, updated for the 21st century.
Content: 005 Preface Isaac Lipnitsky and his Super-Book, by Efim Lazarev
009 Foreword by Anatoly Karpov
010 Foreword by the UK Publisher
011 Introduction
012 Chapter 1 On the Opening
014 Chapter 2 The Centre
037 Chapter 3 The Centre and the Flanks
052 Chapter 4 Conquering the Centre from the Flanks
058 Chapter 5 Mobilizing the Pieces
073 Chapter 6 Evaluating the Position
081 Chapter 7 The Concrete Approach
088 Chapter 8 From Critical Positions to Settled Positions
098 Chapter 9 Positional Flair
109 Chapter 10 Plans in the Opening
122 Chapter 11 The Initiative
131 Chapter 12 Modern Gambits
153 Chapter 13 Opening and Middlegame
167 Chapter 14 Reevaluation of Values
178 Chapter 15 How Long Does a "Novelty" Last?
182 Chapter 16 How Is an Innovation Born?
186 Index of Games and Fragments
188 Appendix: Selected Games of Isaac Lipnitsky
229 Index of Opponents |