Bigger than I expected:

Plenty of text too:



I'm now a huge fan of the low approach (instead of despising it) and look forward to playing it much more often in my games with my newfound knowledge ready to be put into practice.The small-knight approach move is the most severe approach move to the 3-4 stone.
Correct. It doesn't lay open unless you're in the middle of the book. It fits great in a cook book holder though.kirkmc wrote:That's a pretty big book.
It looks, however, that the binding is similar to that of Invincible, and that it won't stay open flat very easily. I almost wish they did hardcovers of these, as they do of Invincible.
Interesting. In my old copy of Ishida, it says that's the most basic approach. It doesn't say anything about severity. Amazing how a little re-wording can change the meaning.Araban wrote:Reading the first chapter has already changed my Go immensely. In fact, the very first sentence in the chapter grabbed my attention:I'm now a huge fan of the low approach (instead of despising it) and look forward to playing it much more often in my games with my newfound knowledge ready to be put into practice.The small-knight approach move is the most severe approach move to the 3-4 stone.
If it were Bob Terry, it would be "the most severe attack"snorri wrote:Interesting. In my old copy of Ishida, it says that's the most basic approach. It doesn't say anything about severity. Amazing how a little re-wording can change the meaning.Araban wrote:Reading the first chapter has already changed my Go immensely. In fact, the very first sentence in the chapter grabbed my attention:I'm now a huge fan of the low approach (instead of despising it) and look forward to playing it much more often in my games with my newfound knowledge ready to be put into practice.The small-knight approach move is the most severe approach move to the 3-4 stone.
I for one wouldn't see 1.2.4 as an improvement. I'd regard it as ugly, amateurish, an attempt to control my order of reading and an unwelcome reminder of certain types of writing. Such over-signposting may have a place on highways where safety is paramount (though there I'm sure it's overdone), but I think most of us have learned how to read books, and some of us enjoy doing so at our own leisurely pace, surrounded by words not numbers.But it could have had better diagram numbers. Rather than Diagram 1.2.4 for variation 4 of variation 2 of diagram 1, it simply uses consecutive numbers. So diagram 25 can follow from diagram 13, for example, but it would not be obvious.
Interesting to compare this book with the previous edition. I'm only 1/3 of the way through the book, but, so far, there is only a small amount of material that is not in the earlier edition. Most of the positional evaluation has been copied word for word from the previous edition.CardiffGo wrote:So far, I am immensely impressed by the information contained. It really looks in depth at joseki, explaining the meaning of the moves and why sub-joseki sequences fail.