How to Win Quickly at Chess

How To Win Quickly At Chess

How to Win Quickly at ChessAuthor: IM John Donaldson
143 Pages. Summit Publishing, 1991
Get it for under $10 on Amazon!

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What’s in a game collection?

Now in my 20th year of teaching chess, more than ever I’m convinced most improving players bite off way more than they can chew. I’m no exception.

This applies to every area of chess, especially in selecting a coach or choosing which instructional materials to study.

Game collections are always popular with chess fans; Irving Chernev and Fred Reinfeld mostly built their repuations as authors with their books of highly instructive, well-annotated games.

Well-annotated, but not too well annotated!

There are plenty of game collections with dense notes by grandmasters, backed up with computer analysis … but do these “correct” books actually help most readers improve their play?

There’s nothing wrong with grandmaster commentary … but their notes are often written for very strong players. In the United States, only 2-3% of tournament players have ratings over 2000. I suspect things are similar in most countries.

 

Don’t be fooled by the title

How to Win Quickly at Chess is yet another example that the author makes a chess book, not the subject matter!

John Donaldson (born 1958) is an International Master (1983) and FIDE Senior Trainer (2020) who has captained the U.S. (Open) Olympiad team since 1986. He’s written dozens of books on all phases of the game, including a number of historical works. I could have justifiably included him in my Great Chess Authors series, and in hindsight maybe I should have.

Miniature collections can be fun, but often feature “gimmicky” chess and lack instructional value. Not this one!

Donaldson defines a “miniature” as a game that ends in under 21 moves, and gives 76 examples, one to four pages each, in these chapters:

Introduction
Chapter One: History Repeats Itself [games 1-9]
Chapter Two: King Pawn [games 10-28]
Chapter Three: Queen Pawn [games 11-48]
Chapter Four: English and King’s Indian Attack [games 49-57]
Chapter Five: Perpetuals [games 58-70]
Super Short Games [games 71-76]
Bibliography

Chapter One features games where multiple victims fell pray to the same (or nearly the same) opening pitfalls.

Chapters Two, Three, and Four feature miniatures divided by opening family; within each chapter, the games are sorted by ECO code.

Chapter Five features short games drawn by repetition or perpetual check. There are a couple of well-known examples, but most you are not likely to have seen.

Super Short Games is just what it sounds like; included is the backstory to the infamous Zapata—Anand game from Biel 1988.

 

How to Win Quickly at Chess is not a must-buy, but it is a fine modern game collection for the improving player. At 2000+, I myself picked up some useful ideas. Leave the dense tomes behind; get easy-to-read volumes like this one by serious authors that contain excellent instructional content.

Recommended!

ForwardChess: Good for Reading Chess Books?

A Huge Timesaver

If you’re comfortable reading books on a screen (web or downloadable app), ForwardChess will save you a lot of time:

  • No need to use a board and pieces, resetting again and again to play through variations.
  • No need to enter games or entire books into ChessBase.
  • No need to add more “stuff” to your physical chess library which, if you’re like me, could have hundreds of books in it already!
ForwardChess
ForwardChess app. Image: play.google.com

 

Try Before You Buy

If you walked into a real bookstore, you could peruse the books you were thinking of buying. Forward chess allows you to read samples, often including a chapter or two to see if the title is what you expect.

 

Better Prices

The 670+ books currently available on ForwardChess are usually cheaper than their print alternatives, and comparable to Amazon prices. And whether you get a physical book or a Kindle version, you can’t play through the moves without a board …

The ForwardChess libary include classics by Jose Capablanca, Fred Reinfeld, and Rudolf Spielmann among others, as well as a plethora of contemporary titles. There are no Chernev or Mednis books, however — please fix this, ForwardChess!

Most major publishers are represented, including Chess Stars, Everyman Chess, Quality Chess, and New in Chess. The notable exception is Gambit Publications.

 

Conclusion

Chessable has a lot of fans; I’ve used it some and I think it’s ok … but it doesn’t let me study the way I grew up doing with “regular” books. At least, I don’t know how to use it in this way.

ForwardChess books are intended to be read like physical books. It is a blessing for chess players. If you’re lazy, like me, and don’t want to take out a board and pieces any longer, there is no longer any excuse to not study!