The Seven Deadly Chess Sins by Jonathan Rowson, Paperback, 9781901983364 | Buy online at The Nile
Departments
 Free Returns*

The Seven Deadly Chess Sins

Author: Jonathan Rowson  

Paperback

"A British champion discusses the most common causes of disaster in chess"--Cover.

Read more
New
$60.37
Or pay later with
Check delivery options
Paperback

PRODUCT INFORMATION

Summary

"A British champion discusses the most common causes of disaster in chess"--Cover.

Read more

Description

Everyone loses chess games occasionally, but all too often we lose a game due to moves that, deep down, we knew were flawed. Why do we commit these chess-board sins? Are they the result of general misconceptions about chess and how it should be played? And how can we recognize the warning signs better?

In this thought-provoking and entertaining book, Jonathan Rowson investigates, in his inimitable style, the main reasons why chess-players sometimes go horribly astray, focusing on the underlying psychological pitfalls:
Thinking (unnecessary or erroneous)
Blinking (missing opportunities; lack of resolution)
Wanting (too much concern with the result of the game)
Materialism (lack of attention to non-material factors)
Egoism (insufficient awareness of the opponent and his ideas)
Perfectionism (running short of time; trying too hard)
* Looseness ("losing the plot"; drifting; poor concentration)

Read more

Critic Reviews

“"Jonathan Rowson's psychological and philosophical musings called 'The Seven Deadly Chess Sins' makes splendid reading and certainly helps those chessplayers who think too much during the games, or miss opportunities, or are too greedy, or don't pay attention to material, or refuse to see another human across the chessboard, or try to be too perfect or drift while concentrating. Or all of the above" - GM Lubosh Kavalek, Washington Post”

"...contains a huge quantity of original insight. Rowson's style is refreshingly wordy - a few pages here and there without a chessboard in sight makes the book interesting to read without a chessboard in hand. That said, there are plenty of real examples to emphasise the validity of his theories. Rowson has pinpointed a lot of problems I have experienced without realising it and his suggested remedies are extremely useful. Highly recommended" - GM Luke McShane, Sunday Express
"GM Jonathan Rowson's The Seven Deadly Chess Sins shows how a much deeper understanding of oneself can help enormously to eliminate certain common causes of error" - GM Paul Motwani, The Scotsman
"He has broken ranks by writing about playing chess as it actually is rather than it ought to be and should be greatly commended for this. This is a book which, in contrast to the vast majority of its brethren, I will continue to visit and revisit" - GM Jon Speelman, The Independent
"Jonathan Rowson's psychological and philosophical musings called 'The Seven Deadly Chess Sins' makes splendid reading and certainly helps those chessplayers who think too much during the games, or miss opportunities, or are too greedy, or don't pay attention to material, or refuse to see another human across the chessboard, or try to be too perfect or drift while concentrating. Or all of the above" - GM Lubosh Kavalek, Washington Post

Read more

About the Author

Jonathan Rowson became Scotland's third grandmaster in late 1999, within months of graduating from Oxford University. He was runner-up in the 1997 European Junior Championship, Scottish Champion in 1999 and winner of the Canadian Open in 2000. Rowson's first book, Understanding the Grünfeld, has been highly praised for the quality and originality of his writing, and freshness of approach.

Read more

Back Cover

Everyone loses chess games occasionally, but all too often we lose a game due to moves that, deep down, we knew were flawed. Why do we commit these chess-board sins? Are they the result of general misconceptions about chess and how it should be played? And how can we recognize the warning signs better?In this thought-provoking and entertaining book, Jonathan Rowson investigates, in his inimitable style, the main reasons why chess-players sometimes go horribly astray, focusing on the underlying psychological pitfalls: Thinking (unnecessary or erroneous) Blinking (missing opportunities; lack of resolution) Wanting (too much concern with the result of the game) Materialism (lack of attention to non-material factors) Egoism (insufficient awareness of the opponent and his ideas) Perfectionism (running short of time; trying too hard)* Looseness ("losing the plot"; drifting; poor concentration)Jonathan Rowson became Scotland's third grandmaster in late 1999, within months of graduating from Oxford University. He was runner-up in the 1997 European Junior Championship, Scottish Champion in 1999 and winner of the Canadian Open in 2000. Rowson's first book, Understanding the Gr

Read more

Product Details

Publisher
Gambit Publications Ltd
Published
22nd January 2001
Pages
208
ISBN
9781901983364

Returns

This item is eligible for free returns within 30 days of delivery. See our returns policy for further details.

New
$60.37
Or pay later with
Check delivery options