
Capablanca's Best Chess Endings, Paperback/Irving Chernev
✔ În stoc la elefant.ro
Vezi oferta la elefant.ro
✔ În stoc la elefant.ro
Vezi oferta la elefant.roChess endings have an immediacy lacking in chess endgame or chess problems: endings are not theoretical or composed, but actual board positions, the point in every game when the superfluous falls away, leaving only the essential. Jose Raul Capablanca (1888-1942) had no need for isolated artistic theory or compositions -- he composed and created chess art as he played. All of his genius -- intuitive, tactical, strategic, logical -- all of his art shines clearest in his endings, as he himself was proud to declare, advising others to study them carefully. ``In order to improve your game,`` he said, ``you must study the endgame before anything else; for whereas the endings can be studied and mastered by themselves, the middle game and the opening must be studied in relation to the endgame.`` The best way to follow Capablanca's advice is through this -- the only book devoted to his great endings, 60 complete games emphasizing the grand finale but annotated throughout. Irving Chernev communicates in his notes the mystery and wonder as well as the delight in discovering again and again the original, fertile mind of chess's greatest born player. ``Virtuoso,`` ``exquisite,`` ``profound,`` ``inspired,`` ``elegant,`` and ``fiendish ingenuity`` describe match and tournament games and endings against Alekhine, Steiner, Marshall, Nimzowitsch, Lasker, Reti, and others, the best in the contemporary chess world. Capablanca's eleventh game in the 1901 Cuban championship (which he won, aged 12)











