From the Bookshelf of Chess Readers and Writers

Find A Copy At

Group Discussions About This Book

No group discussions for this book yet.

What Members Thought

Andy
Jul 25, 2010 rated it it was amazing
Among the strongest chess tournaments ever, the 210 games played in Zurich, 1953, were annotated by participant David Bronstein shortly after the tournament ended. Written in Russian, the book, first published in the late 1950s, was not published in an English translation until the late 1970s. The openings and the endgames are not much attended to in Bronstein's comments, but with the comments that he does provide Bronstein has given us a sort of textbook on the middle game. Bronstein considered ...more
Nick Edwards
Feb 06, 2012 marked it as to-read
Richard Ingram
Apr 20, 2012 rated it really liked it
Laith alwaeli
Jan 18, 2013 marked it as to-read
Fermín
Jul 12, 2013 rated it it was amazing
Shelves: favorites
Steve Toyne
Apr 06, 2014 marked it as to-read
Shelves: chess
Angela Maloney
Aug 22, 2015 rated it really liked it
Vito Vitkauskas
Oct 06, 2015 marked it as to-read
Spectraz
Apr 24, 2016 marked it as to-read
Shelves: chess
Ashik Uzzaman
May 04, 2016 marked it as to-read
Shelves: chess, bottom-queue
Никола
Jul 20, 2016 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: шахмат
Leroy
Aug 16, 2016 marked it as to-read
Pasha
Aug 26, 2016 marked it as to-read
Shelves: chess
.
Sep 07, 2016 marked it as to-read
Shelves: chess-history
Antonio Aguillon
Sep 22, 2016 marked it as to-read
Sheldoomed!
Dec 14, 2016 marked it as to-read
Mason
Mar 12, 2018 marked it as to-read
Mariana
Oct 24, 2019 marked it as to-read
Shelves: chess
Luca D
Nov 21, 2020 rated it it was amazing
Schacker
Dec 08, 2020 rated it really liked it
Robert
Nov 12, 2022 marked it as to-read
Oscarc
Jan 04, 2023 marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: my-chess-library
David Ngo
Mar 12, 2023 marked it as to-read
Arfa
Aug 02, 2023 marked it as to-read
Ray
Jul 25, 2024 is currently reading it