Nikki wrote:
Dear Lifein19x19 Forum,
I'm a former chess player, and I want to learn Go well, and I want to get good fast.
You can get pretty good in two years. Is that fast enough?
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I tried playing at online-go against the computer on 9x9, but I lose against the 20k bot. And here comes my problem: I don't have a clue what to play after the second move, and I don't know where to look it up.
May I suggest starting with the Capture Game, where the objective is to capture one or more opposing stones? You can play on the 6x6 or 7x7.
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There are almost no sources on 9x9 openings, and this freaks me out - I don't know what is a good move to play! In chess, you have names for the openings. You can look up very extensive analysis on those openings, and you know exactly which moves are good, which are bad, and how you can play.
Oh, you could have such things for 9x9 go, but nobody cares that much.
As for 19x19 go, forget it! The closest thing to exhaustive analysis are what are called
joseki, which are mostly about play in the corner. The standard patterns of joseki produce roughly equal outcomes
independent of the rest of the board. However, the rest of the board is usually not independent; so joseki are of limited usefulness. Generally people are advised against studying joseki until they get strong enough to make good whole board judgements.
There are named whole board openings, and books written about them. There are certainly players who keep up with trends in the opening, new plays, and new candidate joseki. But when I was coming along, most of us realized that after 10 moves or so (5 moves by either side), we were pretty much on our own, and that was fine with us.

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So here are my questions:
Where can I learn how to play perfect 9x9 openings, and to punish my opponent when he makes a mistake?
Nowhere.
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I have downloaded "Go Education collection" torrent, and I'm currently reading a book on Life and Death. I also want to buy a Go book, just as reminder to practice and get better. What is the best Go book for all levels, or a fundemental book on Go strategy?
I know of no go book for all levels, or even a go series, except maybe the Maeda tsumego series, which focuses on life and death. I hear good things about
Graded Go Problems for Beginners. Check out Sensei's Library:
http://senseis.xmp.net/?BeginnerStudySection 
Good luck!
