|
ENDGAME VIRTUOSO ANATOLY KARPOV: The Exceptional Endgame Skills of the 12th World Champion
Authors: Karolyi & Aplin
New In Chess (2007)
358 pages
$27.95
Reviewed by Jeremy Silman
Once upon a time there were very few endgame books in English. The
legendary Fred Reinfeld, once again showing that he was ahead of his
time, published a nifty little hardcover tome titled PRACTICAL END-GAME
PLAY in 1940 (176 pages), but nobody seemed to notice. Along came
Reuben Fine, who (in 1941) put together THE classic
everything-in-one-book endgame tome with his BASIC CHESS ENDINGS. This
masterpiece dominated the endgame landscape for decades, and it was
only in 1974 that the mind-bending PAWN ENDINGS by Averbakh and
Maizelis was translated into English (from Russian), shaking the
foundation of Fine's endgame hegemony. More books appeared in this
Russian to English series (Queen Endings, Minor Piece Endings, etc.),
and these quickly became the "in" books among very strong players.
With Fine's vulnerability suddenly out in the open for all to see,
other writers slowly tried to carve their piece out of the endgame pie.
Irving Chernev realized that readers might enjoy a bit more human
interest in their endgame-read, and so he whipped out CAPABLANCA'S BEST
CHESS ENDINGS in 1978, which has since become a classic (This is one of
those books that really does deserve to be in every player's library).
Yugoslavia's Informator leapt into the English/American market with
their no-language THE BEST ENDINGS OF CAPABLANCA AND FISCHER.
After that, the trickle of new endgame books became a solid flow, which
picked up even more steam and transformed into mini-geyser
(Shereshevsky's ENDGAME STRATEGY was the best of this crop, the English
translation appearing to much fanfare in 1985), which grew again into a
small flood. Finally, in the last few years, all hell has broken loose
and a virtual avalanche of endgame books has seemingly saturated the
market.
This avalanche featured such books as VASILY SMYSLOV: ENDGAME VIRTUOSO
(by Smyslov, appearing in English in 1997), Korchnoi's PRACTICAL ROOK
ENDINGS in 1999 (very advanced and superb), John Emms dashed off THE
SURVIVAL GUIDE TO ROOK ENDINGS to universal adoration. FUNDAMENTAL
CHESS ENDINGS by Muller & Lamprecht (2001) which was christened the
"new and improved" BASIC CHESS ENDINGS, and DVORETSKY'S ENDGAME MANUAL,
which fell from the heavens in 2003 (which many insisted was the end
all and be all of endgame books).
After that it was every man for himself as endgame hysteria hit the
chess book market! Everyman, as part of their excellent STARTING OUT
series, published a multi-volume endgame course where each book covered
a different endgame umbrella. There followed CHESS ENDGAME TRAINING
(Rosen), CHESS ENDINGS MADE SIMPLE (Snape), SECRETS OF CHESS ENDGAME
STRATEGY (Lars Bo Hansen), 101 CHESS ENDGAME TIPS (Giddins), VAN
PERLOS'S ENDGAME TACTICS, and many, many more.
Some years ago I had decided to write an endgame book, but when I saw
the "endgame locusts" lining the bookstores I almost decided against
it. However, some serious thought convinced me that endgame books were
divided into categories:
1) Encyclopedic (BASIC CHESS ENDINGS, FUNDAMENTAL CHESS ENDINGS, and even DVORETSKY'S ENDGAME MANUAL were part of this group).
2) Entertaining (VAN PERLO'S ENDGAME TACTICS covers this genre)
3) Scientific (FINAL COUNTDOWN)
4) Instructive (ENDGAME STRATEGY, SILMAN'S COMPLETE ENDGAME COURSE, the STARTING OUT series, etc.)
5) Hero Worship (VASILY SMYSLOV: ENDGAME VIRTUOSO, CAPABLANCA'S BEST CHESS ENDINGS, and ENDGAME VIRTUOSO ANATOLY KAPPOV)
After contemplating this situation, I felt that there would always be
room for endgame books in the scientific, entertaining, and hero
worship categories. It seemed to me that, for the moment, the three
mighty tomes listed above have given us all we need in the encyclopedic
category. And, there were just too many books for anyone's good in the
instruction category!
This posed another question: Why were these "instructive endgame books"
selling if so many had been written? The answer seemed clear: none of
them gave the student the guidance he needed and wanted, and none of
them made the chess hopeful feel that there would be light at the end
of the tunnel. So another book was written, another book was bought,
nobody learned much, and the cycle repeated endlessly. This explains my
decision to write SILMAN'S COMPLETE ENDGAME COURSE: FROM BEGINNER TO
MASTER (I would like to say it has closed the lid on the "instructive"
category, but that's just a pipedream. Many more will be tossed out in
the years to come!).
And so, we finally come to the real topic of this review: ENDGAME
VIRTUOSO ANATOLY KARPOV by the amazing Tibor Karolyi (How is it
possible for this well known chess trainer to write so many excellent
books so quickly?). This "hero worship" endgame book wisely stands in
the evergreen category. People will always have heroes, and they will
always want to see proof of their heroes' specific skills.
I realize that Mr. Karolyi will argue that this is also an instructive
book, and in a sense he's right. You can only get better by looking
over Karpov's handling of seemingly quiet positions, and a Master will
find his endgame basics greatly expanded if he carefully goes through a
book like this. Lower rated players, though, will enjoy the bright
light given off by their hero, and they will even subconsciously pick
up concepts and patterns that will lead to a strengthening of their
endgame skills. But overall, the thick reams of analysis will prove too
daunting to non-masters.
This is not to say that the non-master shouldn't buy it! The book does
offer Karpov fans more bang for their worship, many lessons will be
learned, and you don't have to go over every bit of analysis to enjoy
Karpov's endgame acumen.
Karolyi showed good sense with his design. He places the examples in
four chapters: The Early Years, Rise to the Top, World Champion, and
Later Years. This allows the reader to see Karpov's ever-deepening
skills, and to get more and more involved with the whole process on an
emotional level. To make this reaction come to pass, Karolyi
gives biographical material at key junctures and adds lots of
interesting prose to the notes.
All this is great stuff, but the author goes beyond the call of duty
when he analyzes each and every game with unparalleled depth. As I said
before, this can be quite daunting to the chess amateur, but it's of
great interest to titled players who want to improve their endgame
skills by going through analysis of this quality. Thus, ENDGAME
VIRTUOSO ANATOLY KARPOV should appeal to a fairly large audience.
A real treat to Karpov fans and those that enjoy high quality endgames,
ENDGAME VIRTUOSO ANATOLY KARPOV is highly recommended to players from
1600 right up to grandmaster.
Click if you would like to buy (or get more information
about):
ENDGAME
VIRTUOSO ANATOLY KARPOV
BASIC
CHESS ENDINGS By Reuben Fine, 586 pages, $24.95
FUNDAMENTAL
CHESS ENDINGS By Muller & Lamprecht, 416 pages, $29.95
DVORETSKY'S
ENDGAME MANUAL (2nd EDITION) By Mark Dvoretsky, 402 pages,
$27.95
VAN
PERLO'S ENDGAME TACTICS By Van Perlo, 480 pages, $28.95
PRACTICAL
ROOK ENDINGS By Viktor Korchnoi, 98 pages, $18.95
THE
SURVIVAL GUIDE TO ROOK ENDINGS By John Emms, 160 pages, $18.95
ENDGAME
STRATEGY By Shereshevsky, 218 pages, $18.95
SILMAN'S
COMPLETE ENDGAME COURSE: FROM BEGINNER TO MASTER By Jeremy
Silman, 532 pages, $22.95
STARTING
OUT: PAWN ENDGAMES By Glenn Flear, 144 pages, $17.95
STARTING
OUT: ROOK ENDGAMES By Chris Ward, 160 pages, $18.95
STARTING
OUT: MINOR PIECE ENDGAMES By John Emms, 208 pages, $17.95
VASILY
SMYSLOV: ENDGAME VIRTUOSO By Smyslov, 176 pages, $19.95
CHESS
ENDGAME TRAINING Bernd Rosen, $19.95
CHESS
ENDINGS MADE SIMPLE Ian Snape, $19.95
SECRETS
OF CHESS ENDGAME STRATEGY Lars Bo Hansen, $25.95
101
CHESS ENDGAME TIPS Steve Giddins, $18.95
FINAL
COUNTDOWN Hajernius, $17.00 (A personal favorite!)
|