9 November 2010
Chess news and chess trivia blog (c) Alexandra Kosteniuk, 2010
Hi Everyone,
It’s that time of the year when everything is being summed up and ‘— of the Year’ awards are being announced. One of our favourites is of course ‘The Guardian Chess Book of the Year‘!
The award has gone to The Attacking Manual, Volume 2: Technique and Praxis: Technique and Praxis v. 2 by Jacob Aagaard. The six shortlisted titles for the award included:

- John Healy’s Coffeehouse Chess Tactics: An unusual book in that it’s a collection of games, fragments and autobiographical gobbets by an unranked, though obviously talented, player. But, the judges felt, while the writing was much more literary than is usual in a chess book, they were left wanting more chess.

- Andrew Soltis’s Studying Chess Made Easy: is useful and accessible, but again there was a feeling that it’s a little light.

- Mastering the Chess Openings, vol 4, by the highly respected John Watson, is very readable, but slightly dry, according to the judges.

- Garry Kasparov’s Kasparov vs Karpov 1988-2009 continues the series begun in 2003 with My Great Predecessors. The judges said they admired the scale of Kasparov’s enterprise, but found the formula too familiar.
- High-class games in Yasser Seirawan’s Chess Duels: My Games with the World Champions, was found to be witty by the judges but it fell short of the award.
So congratulations to Aagaard and Quality Chess. Find a neat chess example from the wining book at this Guardian page.
From Alexandra Kosteniuk’s
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