In the Beginning: The Opening in the Game of Go (Elementary Go Series) (Volume 1) by Ikuro Ishigure(2015-11-10)

by Ikuro Ishigure

Paper Book, 2017

Status

Available

Collection

Publication

Kiseido Publishing Company (2017)

Description

The opening is theoretically the hardest part of the game of go. To professional players, it is the hardest part in practice, as well; in championship games that last two days, for instance, the first day is usually spent playing and thinking about the first 50 moves, and the second day is spent finishing all the rest. Such is the consistency of professional play in the middle game and endgame that if a player comes out of the opening with a bad position, it is almost impossible for him to catch up. Amateurs sometimes rush through their initial moves, saving their powers for the fighting later, but this is more an indication that they do not understand the opening than a sign of talent. The number of possibilities in any opening position is so vast that a player must rely on his feeling for the game rather than on rigorous analysis for guidance. Here he has the greatest chance to use his imagination, play creatively, and develop a personal style. This is the one phase of go that has shown any significant evolution during the past few centuries, and it still defies absolute comprehension. No book can develop a person's imagination or personal style, and this one does not make the attempt. In a sense, therefore, it is very incomplete: the reader will not find a prescription for every situation and in actual play he will have to make his own choices most of the time. What we have tried to give him is a basis to start from: some sound moves, some useful ideas, some good examples. If we have succeeded, the following pages will help him to increase both his skill at and enjoyment of the game.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member jorgearanda
A succinct and clear exploration of the opening phase of the game of Go. A lot of its content flew above me --for instance, I can intuitively see the author's point about how a certain group of stones is advantageous, but I don't know how to capitalize on it, and the book does not help me in this
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sense. In any case, this is a problem of my own Go level, not of the book's exposition.
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LibraryThing member jdludlow
While I feel that "Opening Theory Made Easy" is a better book than this one, I still read "In the Beginning" twice. There is a lot of fundamental information to be gained from it. It's well written, with clear examples.It ends with a series of 10 problems which are graded on a sliding scale. You
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can get partial credit for playing 2nd- or 3rd- best moves, which are all explained.
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Original publication date

1973
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