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Raymond Keene

Author of The Pocket Book of Chess

150 Works 1,755 Members 9 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Raymond Keene is the chess correspondent for The Times and The Spectator.
Image credit: ericschiller.com

Works by Raymond Keene

The Pocket Book of Chess (1988) 122 copies
The King's Indian Defence (1973) 45 copies
Learn From the Grandmasters (1975) 44 copies
1974 World Chess Olympiad Nice, France (1975) — Editor — 42 copies
Chess: An Illustrated History (1990) 35 copies, 1 review
The Modern Defence (1972) 26 copies
Leonid Stein : Master of Attack (1976) 25 copies, 1 review
Battle of the Titans (1991) 24 copies
Chess Olympiad 1972 (1973) 23 copies
Becoming a Grandmaster (1977) 16 copies
Caro Kann Defense (1985) 14 copies
Keene On Chess (1999) 14 copies
Brain Games World Chess Champ (2001) 12 copies, 1 review
Winning Moves (1991) 6 copies
Dynamic Chess Openings (1982) 6 copies
Haifa Chess Olympiad 1976 (1977) 5 copies
How to beat Gary Kasparov (1990) 5 copies
Winning Moves (1992) 5 copies
Openings (1979) 4 copies
Schack på högsta nivå (1981) 2 copies
Karpov - Korchnoi 1981 (2004) 2 copies
Grandmaster Tactics (2008) 1 copy
Book of Chess (1988) 1 copy
Karpov - Korchnoi 78 (1979) 1 copy
Man V Machine (1996) 1 copy
The Moscow Challenge (2003) 1 copy
Modern Chess Theory 1980-81 (1980) — Author — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

13 reviews
I'd just like to bring attention to one problem with this book as a method of rating your strength. It's that it has rather fallen foul to the availlability of chess engines such as Stockfish, and the computational grunt they give the average chess enthusiast vis a vis the evaluation of the author.

My beef is this - the author basically takes you through a series of annotated games, where you are invited to guess the next move, and are awarded points if you get it right. You recieve nothing show more if you get it wrong (though there is a 100 point discretionary fudge-factor that is allowed on each question - if the move you chose doesn't lead to your mate or a loss of material). Now, maybe back at the time the book was written, amateur chess players would take the written word of a GM as gospel. However, nowadays we have access to engines like Stockfish to help evaluate chess positions. When playing through the first game, I thought that I had found a strong alternative move to the text (and therefore 'correct' answer); a fork c.f. a pin. Firing up stockfish, this move was evaluated by the engine as a whole piece-value better than the text move.

I was robbed!

Having said that, it is an interesting selection of matches and certainly provides insight. Just take it's 'ratings' with a pinch of salt!
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A slender, softbound volume that only contains 12 games. It is easy to follow and notated with symbolic/algabraic notation. Has photos from each game and the print is fairly large. Not a bad book considering the paucity of games.
Analysis of some of the great games of Nigel Short, who rose to fame as a serious challenger for world title in the early 90s. He's still a fine player but no longer considered a prime contender.

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Statistics

Works
150
Members
1,755
Popularity
#14,658
Rating
3.2
Reviews
9
ISBNs
221
Languages
7
Favorited
1

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