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Review: Amateur’s Mind:Brilliant if rather bulky & heavy. - A good “walkthrough” between chess student and master on how students think and the Master pointing out how to correct fallacious reasoning or blind spots in the approach to play that sub 800 Elo players have. The book itself is crisply printed with clear diagrams, although it could be smyth sewn binding so it could be laid flat better. The book assumes in presentation that you will have a board in front of you to go through the conversation between student and master, and this does help enormously. Readers will find this book a struggle without having this. Also a pencil to annotate in the margins will help you Review: good book - i got this book about 4 years ago when started up playing chess again. i read the book but could not understand most of it. so i carried on buying books on chess hoping to get better. then i picked the book up again and read over the chapters again and again then i started to understand the game more.the book as made me a much better player and think its a good buy.the idear of the book for me was reading it 3 times to get a good idear of how a amateur and master thinks.
| ASIN | 1890085022 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 101,044 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 107 in Chess (Books) 260 in Indoor Games |
| Customer reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (673) |
| Dimensions | 15.24 x 3.18 x 22.86 cm |
| Edition | 2nd Expanded ed. |
| ISBN-10 | 9781890085025 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1890085025 |
| Item weight | 726 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 443 pages |
| Publication date | 1 Oct. 1999 |
| Publisher | Siles Press (US) |
K**N
Amateur’s Mind:Brilliant if rather bulky & heavy.
A good “walkthrough” between chess student and master on how students think and the Master pointing out how to correct fallacious reasoning or blind spots in the approach to play that sub 800 Elo players have. The book itself is crisply printed with clear diagrams, although it could be smyth sewn binding so it could be laid flat better. The book assumes in presentation that you will have a board in front of you to go through the conversation between student and master, and this does help enormously. Readers will find this book a struggle without having this. Also a pencil to annotate in the margins will help you
K**G
good book
i got this book about 4 years ago when started up playing chess again. i read the book but could not understand most of it. so i carried on buying books on chess hoping to get better. then i picked the book up again and read over the chapters again and again then i started to understand the game more.the book as made me a much better player and think its a good buy.the idear of the book for me was reading it 3 times to get a good idear of how a amateur and master thinks.
T**T
Great book
Great book for beginners intermediate players
B**H
Instructive if you can spare the time
This book explores some of the thinking that goes on behind chess moves and strategies in real life coaching sessions and despite the vey American language it doesn't take too long to work out what's going on. However, despite the authors assumption that everyone reading the book will be able to identify with his thought processes, I found myself feeling that his explanations were not immediately clear much of the time and I only profited from this book when I was able to sit down, quietly, with a board and pieces and an hour or more to spare. Not easy bedtime reading, but it pays off if you can devote some time to it. Enjoyable, innovative, and it will improve your chess, but expect to put in the hours.
H**H
Great detailed book for beginners lots of tactics and tricks
It’s a big book bigger than I expected. It’s written in an easy way to understand and is very detailed. If you have to buy one chess book buy this one
D**R
Easy to read and really useful for beginners like me
Easy to read and really useful for beginners like me. I haven't finished the book and already I can see some improvement in the way I look at my games. Last night I won a 1600-rated guy, and I'm around 1300! :-)
V**0
Good item
Son loved it
E**Y
Beneficial.
Educational.
P**K
I wanted to write my first product review on Amazon for this book because I think I may have a slightly different perspective on its value than a lot of the reviewers on here. I don't have a USCF rating, but I do play against HIARCS regularly and it seems to classify me somewhere in the neighborhood of 1150. I think this is an important point to note, because this puts me firmly below the rating level most people suggest you attain before starting on Silman's books (Coach Dan Heisman, for instance, recommends waiting until you reach 1400 before tackling The Amateur's Mind, and 1600 before the "big guns" of How to Reassess Your Chess). The reason for this suggestion is generally given to be a need for low-level players to focus on tactics until they are blue in the face, because all of the positional theory in the world won't help you if you miss a nasty knight fork and lose huge amounts of material. As someone who has blundered away more than a few games, I certainly understand their point. With that said, I really believe that a player at my level will benefit tremendously from studying this book. I've noticed a marked increase in my board vision and goal-setting since starting to work through The Amateur's Mind, these are concepts that seem to be thought of as "intangibles" in the realm of casual chess play. Perhaps I still make mistakes frequently, but the mistakes I make are now (generally) oversight errors rather than hopeless tactical fishing... this is the sort of thing that will correct itself with experience and focus. In other words, now when I blunder away a game it is within the context of having a plan that is less effective than that of my opponent! Although I haven't seen the huge increase in rating points that many people claim to realize after digesting this book, I do think that it is only a matter of time and practice before this happens for me, too. I now see the reasons for many opponent moves that once seemed mysterious, and find myself better able to understand why I lost when it happens. I also have a handful of over-the-board nemeses who beat me frequently by the use of their superior tactical skill, but as I watch them play now I am beginning to identify their own strategic failings. While steadily improving my tactical abilities would doubtlessly lead me toward standing toe-to-toe with my usual opponents, an equal amount of tactical improvement combined with stronger positional awareness must result in my being able to not just compete, but win. Perhaps this is not the most commonly prescribed method for improving one's play, but I think that there is a clear delineation between chess players who win by tactics and bravado (not that these are mutually exclusive) and chess players who, nonplussed by their swashbuckling foe, leave him badly beaten and somewhat confused as to where it was he went wrong. I work on tactics problems daily and I don't want to be misunderstood: at a low level of skill, tactics are clearly the area of playing chess that deserves the most time and effort. However, as someone who doesn't take lessons and largely learns by self-directed study, I think The Amateur's Mind challenges the developing player to become aware of the concept of strategy; before reading the reviews of this and Reassess, I was hardly aware of the distinction between the two! After purchasing TAM and working through a couple of chapters, I can say I finally realize what I had long believed but not understood: chess is not a game of single position / solve for x puzzles played in sequence until someone loses, a game of chess develops organically around two people seeking to impose their will on each other. That's a big shift in mindset, and I would be willing to bet it's an extremely valuable one!
E**O
Esta obra, é para aqueles que desejam melhorar suas interpretações nas partidas de xadrez. Seja jogando, estudando, reproduzindo partidas, ou aprendendo novos ensinamentos. Nos coloca como uma terceira pessoa, usando varios alunos(as), parceiros(as), nos exemplos com uma variedade de conhecimentos, que nos leva a pensar sobre os lances realizados, suas imprecisões e seus acertos. Desde o primeiro capitulo com "imbalances", já traz a necessidade de desnvolver ideias a partir das diferentes estruturas, em material, ou em criação de planos. Estou lendo com calma, pois merece dedicar algum tempo, em cada capitulo lido. Chegou no prazo prometido, e comprei este livro com base nos argumentos postados por outros leitores. Muito bom para praticantes desta arte.
A**N
This is a review from a professional chess coach from Chennai ( Arun - Rebel chess academy) I have a decode of experience in coaching beginner all the way upto 1500 fide. Silmans book bundle along which includes Amateur mind is a excellent way to teach beginners about the positional concepts. After this you can use books by Nimzowitsch or Johan hellesten series.
O**O
Soy un jugador que tengo entre unos 1400 y 1600 de rating en chess.com. Compré este libro por las reseñas y porque he visto que Silman es excelente para transmitir el conocimiento ajedrecístico. Este libro ha rebasado todas mis expectativas. Es justamente lo que yo buscaba, un libro que realmente me ayude a comenzar a ver aquellas cosas que no alcanzo a ver en mis partidas. Quizás cosas tan comunes en jugadores fuertes, pero que yo no podía ver o no era consciente de ello en mis partidas. Silman tiene una forma de transmitir única, didáctica, porque pone posiciones a sus alumnos (de distintos niveles de rating) y los pone a analizar en voz alta, y de esa manera Silman puede darse cuenta en dónde está el error en su forma de pensamiento o de analizar una posición. Eso es lo que me parece que ayuda a abrir el cerebro a jugadores como yo, que tienen rato jugando, pero que no he alcanzado a crecer por falta de ver en el juego cosas que son importantísimas ver. Yo lo recomiendo para jugadores que ya tienen unos 1200 a 1600 de rating (aclaro que me baso en el rating de chess.com).
A**V
If you think you're bad at chess, let me tell you a secret: everyone is bad at chess. If you're good at chess, tell you a secret: everyone is bad at chess. Get yourself a copy of this book. The most exciting journey of your life if nothing else. And I've been places. Every couple years I re-read it anew, and every couple years it's like I've never read it before. That's the kind of book we're talking about.
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