It is actually for 2200+ Players. I think he even mentions this in the Introduction or he claimed that in some kind of interview. But it is in fact for (nearly) Master Level Players.
Great, I like your book reviews! Keep them coming ;) A remarkable year for Sam Shankland indeed. Winning US Championships in front of So, Nakamura and Caruana and after that Capa Memorial and the American Continental Championships is a huuuge achievement. I don't even think Caruana winning WC would depreciate this.
bit off topic but I hope to see some championship coverage from you sometime! Maybe cover the tiebreak finisher or do some recap\summaries videos. would love to hear your perspective on it all
excellent
Feels like this book is for 2200+ if not 2400+.
It is actually for 2200+ Players. I think he even mentions this in the Introduction or he claimed that in some kind of interview. But it is in fact for (nearly) Master Level Players.
Les IsMore feels like 2000+ to me based on the exercise here by the way i'm 2200
@@cutiecutie8609 . Chess players have different strengths but we can agree this book is not for beginners or even intermediate players.
Review starts at 4:45
Great, I like your book reviews! Keep them coming ;)
A remarkable year for Sam Shankland indeed. Winning US Championships in front of So, Nakamura and Caruana and after that Capa Memorial and the American Continental Championships is a huuuge achievement. I don't even think Caruana winning WC would depreciate this.
Great review!
bit off topic but I hope to see some championship coverage from you sometime! Maybe cover the tiebreak finisher or do some recap\summaries videos. would love to hear your perspective on it all