Aron Nimzowitsch 1928 - 1935
Annotated Games & Essays
Content:
007 Foreword by Raymond Keene
009 Anthologist's Foreword
011 Preface of the German Publisher
012 Introduction (incomplete)
017 The Great International Chess Masters' Tournament in Bad Kissingen 1928
026 A Blockade Game (Mieses-Nimzowitsch)
044 International Grandmaster Tournament of the Berliner Tageblatt - Berlin 1928
046 The 'Twice-Won' Chess Game (Marshall-Nimzowilsch)
048 Two Endgames
051 The Early Draw (Nimzowitsch-Capablanca)
054 The Combinational Game (Reti-Nimzowitsch)
068 IV. International Chess Masters' Tournament Carlsbad 1929
069 The Great Success in Nimzowitsch's Chess Career!
071 Lang Live Optimism and Morning Gymnastics!
080 From the Bluebook of Centralization
113 The Carlsbad Game Nimzowitsch-Spielmann in the Light of Chess-Psychology Analysis
114 Lack of Malleability in Playing Style Causes Lass of Game!
128 International Masters' Tournament in San Remo 1930
133 Have the 'Fianchertoed' Bishops Lost Same thing of Their Popularity 7 (Ahues-N.)
141 The Winning of a Tournament Game as a Painful Affair..
142 Are There Chess Truths? (by Dr. S.G. Tartakower) (Bogoljubow-Nimzowitsch)
150 Samething about Defence (Grau-Nimzowitsch)
152 You Think You're Pushing and You Are Pushed (article by R. Spielmann)
160 International Chess Masters' Tournament Liege 1930
161 Liege and Frankfurt or: The Rueful Return to the System
176 The International Masters' Tournament at Frankfurt am Main, 1930
191 Centralization (illustrated by three games from Frankfurt am Main)
194 System and Intuition (Colle-Nimzowitsch / N.-Ahues / Mannheimer-N.)
199 Training Matches in Bern, 1931
199 Three Months as a Chess Teacher in Switzerland
200 The Problem ofDefence (N.-Zimmermann, l.Rd. / N.-lohner)
211 35th Swiss Chess Championship in Winterthur 1931
214 The Curse of the Rigid Line of Defence
231 The International Grandmaster Tournament in Bled (V eldes ) 1931
232 Is My Third Prize in Bled to be Considered a Relative Failure?
233 My Play in theTournament in Bled
266 Mixed Masters' Tournament, Copenhagen 1933
277 An Honourable Defeat (Nimzowitsch-B.Nielsen)
282 Stahlberg-Nimzowitsch Match in Gothenburg 1934
282 Stahl berg a New Grandmaster!
297 Six - Player Tournament, Stockhohn 1934
297 Further Adventures in Swedenland (Nimzowitsch-Lundin)
310 Nimzowitsch-Stoltz Match in Stockhohn 1934
310 My Match against Stoltz
317 International Tournament and 37th Swiss Championship in Zürich, 1934
331 Nordie Chess Congress Copenhagen 1934
339 The Master and the Amateurs
339 The Gifted Amateur
346 The Idea of Correspondence Chess
350 Nimzowitsch as a Simultaneous Player
350 A Simultaneous Game in Accord with the Foregoing Lecture (A Game in the Style of Alekhine)
352 Three Months as Chess Teacher in Switzerland
356 Difficult Simultaneous Games
367 Various Articles by A. Nimzowitsch
367 Attack or Defence. On the Strategy ofthe Struggle ofChess and Life [1928]
368 The Self-Criticism of the Fighter. A Contemporary Reflection [1928]
370 Lasker's All-Encompassing Playing Style [1929]
371 The 'Almost-Combinational' Game - A modern, all too modern occurrence [1929]
374 The Type of Drawing Player a la Capablanca as a Modern Game of Deception [1929]
377 The Mistake and the Sin of Omission - A harmless fairytale
378 On the Significance of Prophylaxis to Chess Strategy and Chess Psychology - Illustrated in a continuity of two positions and one game
381 Is 'Simplicity' Beautiful? [1929]
382 The Russian Game-Style of Old and Now [1929]
387 How Grandmasters Train [1930]
391 In Memory of Michael I vanovich Chigorin [1933]
395 Nimzowitsch Plays King's Gambit! (game against Schweinburg. Berlin 1934)
399 Some Facts about Nimzowitsch's Life
403 Tribute to RudolfReinhardt (by Michael Negele)
405 Remembrances of Rudolf Reinhardt (by Andreas Saremba)
409 List ofSources
411 Index of Games
413 Index of Openings |