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10 Chess Books On Combinations Tactics -gnv64- Site

Here’s a curated write-up of — perfect for players looking to sharpen their calculation, pattern recognition, and attacking skills. 10 Chess Books on Combinations & Tactics 1. Winning Chess Tactics – Yasser Seirawan Part of Seirawan’s famous Winning Chess series, this book introduces tactical motifs (forks, pins, skewers, discovered attacks, etc.) in a clear, engaging style. Great for club players (1200–1600) building a tactical foundation. 2. The Art of the Checkmate – Georges Renaud & Victor Kahn A classic focused entirely on checkmating combinations. It classifies 23 common checkmate patterns (e.g., Anastasia’s mate, Boden’s mate) and shows how they arise from tactical play. Ideal for intermediate players. 3. Chess Tactics for Champions – Susan Polgar Polgar presents hundreds of puzzles, many from her own games, organized by theme. The book stresses practical pattern recognition and calculation. Suitable for players 1400–2000. 4. 1001 Winning Chess Sacrifices and Combinations – Fred Reinfeld An old-school gem. Reinfeld provides 1,001 positions with clear tactical themes — sacrifices leading to mate, material gain, or decisive attack. Excellent for drilling tactics daily. 5. Tactics Time! – Tim Brennan & Anthea Carson A modern collection of 1,001 real-game tactical puzzles from low- and mid-level tournament players. The positions are realistic and instructive, with a helpful difficulty progression. Great for 1000–1600. 6. The Manual of Chess Combinations (aka The Russian School of Chess ) – Sergey Ivashchenko Published in several volumes. Volume 1 is legendary for its thousands of graded tactical problems. Used in former Soviet chess schools. Starts easy but quickly becomes challenging. A tactics workout for serious improvers. 7. Chess Combinations: The Anthology of Chess Combinations – Chess Informant A massive collection of tactical shots from master games, organized by theme and difficulty. No instructional text — just pure, high-quality problems. Excellent for advanced players (1800+) who want to test themselves. 8. Winning Chess Combinations – Yasser Seirawan The companion to Winning Chess Tactics . Focuses on longer combinations (sequences of moves) rather than one-move tactics. Teaches how to build up to decisive blows. Great for 1500–2000. 9. Forcing Chess Moves – Charles Hertan Hertan introduces the concept of “computer eyes” — seeing moves that are hard for humans, like quiet sacrificing moves. Contains hundreds of exercises. A unique, challenging book for 1600–2200. 10. Combinations: The Heart of Chess – Irving Chernev A beloved classic. Chernev explains 100 brilliant combinations from master games, weaving in humor and insight. Less a puzzle book, more a demonstration of how combinations arise from positional pressure. Inspiring for all levels. Quick Recommendation by Level | Rating Range | Best Book(s) | |--------------|----------------| | Beginner (800–1200) | Winning Chess Tactics , Tactics Time! | | Intermediate (1200–1600) | The Art of the Checkmate , 1001 Winning Sacrifices , Manual of Chess Combinations (Vol. 1) | | Advanced (1600–2000) | Forcing Chess Moves , Chess Combinations (Anthology), Winning Chess Combinations | | Expert+ (2000+) | Forcing Chess Moves , Manual of Chess Combinations (Vol. 2+) | Would you like a printable summary or a suggested reading order for self-study?

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