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Dvoretsky's Endgame Manual 4th Revised ed. [Minkštas viršelis]

4.48/5 (329 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 424 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 254x178x25 mm, weight: 340 g, Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Dec-2014
  • Leidėjas: Russell Enterprises
  • ISBN-10: 1941270042
  • ISBN-13: 9781941270042
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 424 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 254x178x25 mm, weight: 340 g, Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Dec-2014
  • Leidėjas: Russell Enterprises
  • ISBN-10: 1941270042
  • ISBN-13: 9781941270042
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The Fourth Edition of a Modern ClassicWhen you are serious about improving your endgame skills, it is time for Dvoretskys Endgame Manual. Perhaps the best known and most respected instructor of world class chessplayers, Mark Dvoretsky has produced a comprehensive work on the endgame that will reward players of all strengths. For those ready to immerse themselves in endgame theory, there may be no better manual available today. But, even if you do not play at master level, the book has been designed to help your endgame too. Basic theories and must-know concepts are highlighted in blue. You may skip the more complex analysis, focus on the text in blue, and still improve your endgame technique. When it appeared in 2003, the first edition of Dvoretskys Endgame Manual was immediately recognized by novice and master alike as one of the best books ever published on the endgame. The enlarged and revised Fourth Edition is better than ever! I am sure that those who study this work carefully will not only play the endgame better, but overall, their play will improve. One of the secrets of the Russian chess school is now before you, dear reader! - From the Foreword to the First Edition by Grandmaster Artur YusupovGoing through this book will certainly improve your endgame knowledge, but just as important, it will also greatly improve your ability to calculate variations... What really impresses me is the deep level of analysis in the book... All I can say is: This is a great book. I hope it will bring you as much pleasure as it has me. - From the Preface to the First Edition by International Grandmaster Jacob AagaardHeres what they had to say about the First Edition: Dvoretskys Endgame Manual ... may well be the chess book of the year... ( It) comes close to an ultimate one-volume manual on the endgame. - Lubomir Kavalek in his chess column of December 1, 2003 in the Washington Post. Dvoretskys Endgame Manual is quite simply a masterpiece of research and insight. It is a tremendous contribution to endgame literature, certainly the most important one in many years, and destined to be a classic of the literature (if it isnt already one). The famous trainer Mark Dvoretsky has put together a vast number of examples that he has not only collected, but analysed and tested with some of the worlds strongest players. This is a particularly important book from the standpoint of clarifying, correcting, and extending the theory of endings. Most of all, Dvoretskys analysis is staggering in its depth and accuracy. - John Watson, reviewing DEM at The Week In Chess2003 Book of the Year - JeremySilman.com2003 Book of the Year - Seagaard Chess Reviews: This is an extraordinary good chess book. To call this the best book on endgames ever written seems to be an opinion shared by almost all reviewers and commentators. And I must say that I am not to disagree. - Erik SobjergExcerpts, including the Table of Contents and the Foreword, of most Russell Enterprises books are available at http://russell-enterprises.com/excerptsdownloads.html.
Foreword 8(1)
Preface 9(1)
From the Author (First Edition) 10(3)
From the Author (Second Edition) 13(1)
Publisher's Note to the Third Edition 14(1)
From the Author (Fourth Edition) 15(1)
Other Signs, Symbols, and Abbreviations 16(1)
Chapter 1 Pawn Endgames
17(54)
Key Squares
17(1)
Corresponding Squares
18(9)
Opposition
18(4)
Mined Squares
22(1)
Triangulation
23(2)
Other Cases of Correspondence
25(2)
King vs. Passed Pawns
27(6)
The Rule of the Square
27(1)
Reti's Idea
28(2)
The Floating Square
30(2)
Three Connected Pawns
32(1)
Queen vs. Pawns
33(2)
Knight or Center Pawn
33(1)
Rook or Bishop's Pawn
33(2)
Pawn Races
35(3)
The Active King
38(3)
Zugzwang
38(1)
Widening the Beachhead
39(2)
The King Routes
41(2)
Zigzag
41(1)
The Pendulum
42(1)
Shouldering
42(1)
Breakthrough
43(4)
The Outside Passed Pawn
47(2)
Two Rook's Pawns with an Extra Pawn on the Opposite Wing
49(5)
The Protected Passed Pawn
54(3)
Two Pawns to One
54(1)
Multi-Pawn Endgames
55(2)
Undermining
57(1)
Two Connected Passed Pawns
58(1)
Stalemate
59(2)
The Stalemate Refuge
59(1)
"Semi-Stalemate"
60(1)
Reserve Tempi
61(10)
Exploiting Reserve Tempi
61(3)
Steinitz's Rule
64(1)
The g- and h-Pawns vs. the h-Pawn
64(2)
The f- and h-Pawns vs. the h-Pawn
66(3)
Both Sides have Reserve Tempi
69(2)
Chapter 2 Knights versus Pawns
71(7)
King in the Corner
71(1)
Mate
71(1)
Drawn Positions
71(1)
Knight vs. Rook's Pawn
72(2)
The Knight Defends the Pawn
74(4)
Chapter 3 Knight Endgames
78(7)
The Deflecting Knight Sacrifice
78(1)
Botvinnik's Formula
79(4)
Pawns on the Same Side
83(2)
Chapter 4 Bishop versus Pawns
85(10)
The Elementary Fortresses
85(6)
Bishop and Rook's Pawn
85(3)
Pawns at h6 and h7
88(1)
Pawns at g6 and g7
89(1)
Bishop at h7 and Pawn at g6
89(2)
Bishop vs. Disconnected Pawns
91(1)
Bishop vs. Connected Pawns
92(3)
Chapter 5 Opposite-color Bishops
95(15)
The Most Important Rules
95(1)
Bishop and Two Connected Pawns vs. Bishop
96(3)
Separated Passed Pawns
99(4)
The King Blockades the Passed Pawn
103(3)
The Bishop Restrains the Passed Pawn
106(4)
Chapter 6 Bishops of the Same Color
110(13)
Minimal Material
110(4)
Bishop and Pawn vs. Bishop
110(1)
Transposition to Positions with One Pawn
111(1)
Interference
112(2)
The Bad Bishop
114(6)
Fixing Pawns
114(1)
Zugzwang
115(1)
Pawns Which Do Not "Play by the Rules"
116(4)
Barrier
120(3)
Chapter 7 Bishop versus Knight
123(18)
Bishop and Pawn vs. Knight
123(2)
Knight and Pawn vs. Bishop
125(1)
The Bishop is Superior to the Knight
126(7)
Cutting the Knight Off
126(1)
Fixing the Pawns
127(2)
The Passed Pawn
129(2)
An Open Position, A More Active King
131(2)
Defensive Methods with a Knight against a Bishop
133(2)
The Knight is Superior to the Bishop
135(6)
Domination and Knight Forks
135(1)
Fixing the Pawns
136(1)
Closed Position, Bad Bishop
137(4)
Chapter 8 Rook versus Pawns
141(9)
Rook vs. Pawn
141(4)
"Moving Downstairs"
141(1)
Cutting the King Off
141(1)
Pawn Promotion to a Knight
141(1)
Stalemate
142(1)
An Intermediate Check for a Gain of Tempo
142(1)
Shouldering
142(1)
Outflanking
142(3)
Rook vs. Connected Pawns
145(3)
Rook vs. Separated Pawns
148(2)
Chapter 9 Rook Endgames
150(89)
Rook and Pawn vs. Rook
150(11)
The Pawn on the Seventh Rank
150(1)
The Pawn on the Sixth Rank
151(4)
The Pawn on the Fifth Rank
155(2)
The Umbrella
157(1)
The Pawn Has Not Crossed the Mid-line
157(4)
A Rook and a Rook's Pawn vs. a Rook
161(5)
The King is in Front of Its Own Pawn
161(1)
The Rook is in Front of the Pawn and the Pawn Is on the Seventh Rank
161(1)
The Rook is in Front of the Pawn and the Pawn Is on the Sixth Rank
162(2)
a- and h-Pawns
164(2)
A Rook and Two Pawns vs. a Rook
166(7)
Doubled Pawns
166(1)
Connected Pawns
166(3)
f- and h-Pawns
169(2)
Other Pairs of Disconnected Pawns
171(2)
A Far Advanced Passed Pawn
173(3)
Transition to a Rook vs. Pawns Endgame
173(2)
Lasker's Idea
175(1)
A Rook and Two Pawns vs. a Rook and Pawn
176(11)
All Pawns are on the Same Wing
176(4)
Pawns on Opposite Wings
180(3)
Disconnected Pawns, One of them is Passed
183(4)
Four Pawns vs. Three on the Same Wing
187(6)
Balance on One Wing and an Extra Pawn on Another
193(34)
The Rook Behind its Own Pawn
193(3)
The Rook in Front of the Pawn, with the Pawn on the Seventh Rank
196(7)
The Rook in Front of the Pawn, with the Pawn on the Sixth Rank
203(13)
A Knight's Pawn
216(6)
The Rook at the Side of the Pawn
222(5)
Common Observations about Endgames with Many Pawns
227(12)
The Rook's Activity
227(4)
The King's Activity
231(1)
King on the Edge
232(2)
Cutting the King Off
234(2)
Akiba Rubinstein's Masterpiece
236(3)
Chapter 10 Rook versus Knight
239(11)
The Lone Knight
239(1)
Rook and Pawn vs. Knight and Pawn
240(5)
Multi-Pawn Endgames
245(5)
Pawns on One Side of the Board
245(2)
Pawns on Both Sides
247(2)
When the Knight is Stronger than the Rook
249(1)
Chapter 11 Rook versus Bishop
250(16)
The Lone Bishop
250(4)
The Dangerous Corner
250(1)
The Safe Corner
250(2)
A Bishop's Pawn
252(2)
Rook and Pawn vs. Bishop and Pawn
254(6)
The Pawns are on the Same File or on Adjacent Files
254(3)
Rook Pawns
257(3)
Two Pawns vs. Two on the Same Wing
260(4)
Three Pawns vs. Three on the Same Wing
264(2)
Chapter 12 Queen Endgames
266(13)
Queen and Pawn vs. Queen
266(3)
Winning Tactical Tricks
269(1)
Defensive Tactics
270(2)
Pawns on the Same Wing
272(2)
A Passed Pawn
274(3)
An Active Queen
277(2)
Chapter 13 Queen versus Rook
279(15)
A Solitary Rook
279(2)
Queen vs. Rook and Pawn
281(6)
The Rook behind the Pawn
281(1)
The Pawn on the Seventh Rank
282(1)
The Pawn on the Sixth Rank
283(2)
A Knight Pawn on the Fifth or Sixth Rank
285(2)
Queen and Pawn vs. Rook and Pawn
287(3)
Passed Pawns
287(1)
Pawns on Adjacent Files
288(2)
A Fortress with Multiple Pawns
290(4)
Chapter 14 Other Material Relations
294(17)
Two Extra Pieces
294(1)
Checkmating with Bishop and Knight
294(1)
Checkmating with Two Knights
295(1)
Rook and Knight vs. Rook
295(2)
Rook and Bishop vs. Rook
297(4)
Without Pawns
297(2)
With Pawns
299(2)
An Extra Bishop or Knight with Queens or Minor Pieces
301(1)
Rook vs. Two Minor Pieces
302(3)
Queen vs. Various Pieces
305(3)
Queen vs. Two Rooks
308(3)
Chapter 15 General Endgame Ideas
311(30)
King's Activity
311(6)
Pawn Power
317(4)
Zugzwang
321(4)
Fortresses
325(6)
A Fortified Camp
325(1)
A Pawn Barrier
325(2)
An Imprisoned King
327(1)
An Imprisoned Piece
328(2)
Binding
330(1)
Stalemate
331(4)
Checkmate
335(3)
Domination
338(3)
Chapter 16 Solutions
341(60)
Bibliography
401(3)
Indexes
404
Index of Players
404(10)
Index of Composers and Analysts
414(4)
Index of Strategic and Tactical Techniques
418