PB as shown see my phoitos. Chess The Easy Way. ( A complete step-by-step, illustrated guide for the beginner including the basic principles of opening,middle,and end game Reuben Fine Cornerstone library. Reprinted 1976. English language. 186 pages.
Reuben C. Fine (1914 – 1993) was an American chess player, psychologist, university professor, and author of many books on both chess and psychology. He was one of the strongest chess players in the world from the mid 1930s until his retirement from chess in 1951. He was granted the title of International Grandmaster by FIDE in 1950, when titles were introduced.
This is one of the books that I used in the mid 1960s and early 1970s when I was interested in improving my chess game. Looking at it from several decades later, I can see why I found this useful. It is a bit more advanced than some of the beginner books that I referred to, but it is still accessible to those who are not yet mastering the game.
The author's view is upbeat (Page vi): ". . .it is possible to improve at chess and the effort required is by no means exorbitant." At the outset, the reader learns of the moves, the pieces, the layour of the chess board, notation (to create records of a game). Chapter II addresses checkmating the lone king. Chapter III looks at three basic porinciples of chess (e.g., the principle of force). Chapters IV and V center on the opening, including basic rules and some problems. There is also an examination of traditional openings, for both White and Black. The book moves on with chapters on what happens after the opening and end games.
For the person with a basic knowledge of chess, this is a nice way to build on that base.
My father is a master at the game of Chess. So when he said this is the best Chess book, the book that got him on the road to being a master Chess player, I listened.
There are thirty rules in this book, for each section of the game (The Beginning, Middle and End) and if you memorize them, practice them (which means a lot of losing) and instinctively use them (better than the person you're playing against anyway) you WILL win.
Chess is a hard game, it is not for weak souls. It is violent, crushing, more painful to some than a war hammer to the head. The better you get the more deeply your pain will be felt when you lose. But hope exists in the game, where the suffering can be dulled.
First read in the 1970's in an attempt to improve my game and I go back to it from time to time. It's an excellent introduction to the most complex, challenging, frustrating and addictive of all board games, and a good resource for players at all levels.