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The Art of Defence in Chess: Defence and Counterattack Techniques in Chess (Pergamon Russian Chess Series)

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All the Everyman Chess books are organized in a structured style and are also presented in a series of levels. The styles encompass Openings (O); Games Collections ((G); and Training (T). The levels are arranged as Children [C]; Novice (N); Club (C); and Advanced (A). This book is in style Training, and is set at level Novice/Club

270 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1988

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About the author

Lev Polugaevsky

16 books2 followers

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Manny.
Author 47 books16.1k followers
September 12, 2010
An interesting fact about chess literature: although attack and defence are equally important, there must be at least twenty books on attacking techniques for every one on defence. More likely it's fifty, or even a hundred.

I wonder why this is? I've never really thought about it before, but now it occurs to me to compare with debugging in software engineering. Every software engineer knows that you spend most of your time debugging programs to find out why they're not working. But, somehow, when you look at the literature, there is shockingly little about the theory of debugging. I remember talking with a couple of very smart people from MIT who'd studied under the legendary Marvin Minsky. One of them had had some cute ideas about how develop better debuggers, but had not been able to get funding to pursue his work.

"If you're debugging, you've done something wrong," he said. "People don't like to admit they've done something wrong. Writing debugging software feels like you're just encouraging them." Or words to that effect - we had this conversation sometime in the 80s.

Well, defence in chess is similar. You did something wrong earlier, and now your opponent has the initiative. You have to figure out where he's trying to attack, and parry his threats. How dull! How frustrating! Really, you shouldn't ever have got into this stupid position. It's your fault.

Yes... on mature consideration, why on earth would you want to read a book on defence? Buy another half dozen books on opening theory, and make sure you don't have to suffer through any more of those those drab, soul-destroying defensive battles. Oh, and playing perfectly is another useful component in this scheme. Then you definitely won't have any use for Polugayevsky and Damsky's obscure little treatise.

________________________________________________

After posting the review, I was surprised by the number of comments which suggested that defence is in principle an impossible task. I hadn't realised to what extent we were straying into the realm of philosophy! Polugayevsky is often like that - in a few hundred years, I think he'll he classified as a romantic philosopher who just happened to be a chess-player.

But going back to the concept of "defence". The most fundamental choice, which underlies everything else, is whether to defend or to counter-attack. Learning to make good decisions here is, more than anything else, what distinguishes a gifted defensive player from an indifferent one.

It's possible to get it wrong in either direction, and I'm surprised to see how directly the considerations carry over to the real world: yes, this is indeed philosophy! So, a classic case where people incorrectly defended instead of counter-attacking was the leadup to WW II. Germany was evidently planning to launch an attack, and Britain decided to maintain a passive stance and avoid open confrontation. As everyone now agrees, this was absolutely the wrong decision, with Munich just being the last and biggest mistake. The whole strategy was misconceived from the start.

In the opposite direction, and somewhat more controversially, I would argue that George W. Bush got suckered by Osama bin Laden in 2001. Bin Laden launched an unexpected attack on the US that killed several thousand people. I think that his real purpose was to lure the US into a poorly thought out counter-attack, and that he succeeded beyond his wildest dreams. At the time, Bush kept drawing parallels with Hitler and WW II, but these parallels were misleading. Hitler's Germany was a major military power, and there was no hope of containing it. Saddam's Iraq was weak, and could easily have been contained; on top of everything else, Saddam wasn't even allied with bin Laden. Bush got it just as wrong as Chamberlain, but in the opposite direction.

Of course, all of the above analysis is speculative. In chess, which is a brilliantly conceived microcosm of human conflict, you can analyse exactly and reach hard conclusions about the relative merits of defending and counter-attacking. It's a very interesting subject.
Profile Image for Serge Pierro.
Author 1 book49 followers
October 15, 2012
When this was originally published, there seemed to be very few books on the art of defense in chess. Polugagevsky does a good job in presenting the thought process necessary for when a player is facing an attack. Good instruction throughout.
Profile Image for Steven.
Author 1 book114 followers
December 28, 2021
Good guide on how to think about positions defensively and find the resources needed to survive a bad position or an attack. A bit sparse on supporting diagrams other than the initial positions. Each chapter ends with What Would You Play? puzzles that emphasize the theme of the chapter.
Profile Image for Harry Harman.
840 reviews19 followers
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February 23, 2022
Error occurs more in defence than attack

Counterattack

Impenetrable dam

Overprotection of strategically important points

Half-open c-file

Counterchances

Gained a material advantage
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