Jujube wrote:
I've bought this from Ebay, it looks pretty old, in 2 volumes. How much Japanese is required for "getting the jist"? Can I get along with it by reading the headings and diagrams only?
Knowing the few "standard" Kanji (Black / White to move; Ko; solution; variation; failure) required for problem books is sufficient.
Understanding the "heading", and the descriptive text of the problem diagram is not really necessary. In a real game, there will be nobody to explain the current situation to you.
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Has it ever been translated into English?
No.
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I understand it'll be over my head even if it were in English but it's one for the future

I had to grab it while I could, along with an old copy of Maeda, an old 2-volume fuseki dictionary, and an old 1946 tesuji book printed in Occupied Japan. I guess it's time to brush up the massive 3 lessons I took in Japanese over the course of a few months...
アシュリー。
You might want to do the C-class problems first.
The problems are divided in chapters, using the kind of the first move of the solution (at least the key move) as sorting criterium. This makes the problems a bit easier, because you have already got a valuable hint what kind of move to look for.
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The really most difficult Go problem ever:
https://igohatsuyoron120.de/index.htmIgo Hatsuyōron #120 (really solved by KataGo)