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Dictionary
of Modern Fuseki Published by Kiseido, http://www.kiseido.com/ Reviewed by Phil Waldron 6d
The phrase "opening dictionary" brings to mind massive chess
tomes filled with a maze of variations for every conceivable opening. While
hardly at that level, the nearly 300 pages of this book do provide some
systematic analysis of several modern openings, including the mini-Chinese, full
Chinese and Kobayashi fusekis. Each of the book's 59 sections a position
from the very early (5-10 moves) of a common opening and provides roughly a
dozen diagrams discussing possible variations. Although this cannot hope to
provide an exhaustive analysis of an entire opening, it does cover the major
branches. Because the analysis deals with the early stages of the game, it is
hardly definitive. Variations where one player gets blown away in 20 moves are
not shown. "Black has better prospects" is a typical judgment, and considerable
playing strength is required to convert such an advantage into a win. For this
reason the book will be most useful to dan-level players. Kyu players will
likely have to grow into the book as their openings improve, although seeing a
discussion of why some opening variations are not played by pros is bound to
help. Given the scarcity of high-level opening theory available in English and
the complete absence of any analysis of several modern openings, this book
should be a welcome addition to any shelf. While unlikely to have anyone playing
perfect openings by the next Go Congress, this book is very well written and I
highly recommend it.
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