Well, I don't read Japanese, but I have Google translate and I am working to learn the kana, grammar, and enough kanji to get a sense of Japanese Go books. And I do have a copy of the book "fuseki revolution" which appears to me to be a compilation of Shibano's older Go World articles. And it looks like John confirmed that, so thank you. I first heard about this from John's post here:
https://lifein19x19.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=17310I've only "read" (computer translated) the first chapters on San Ren Sei and the Chinese Opening so far. It's pretty neat. The explanations are simple to follow. I've seen tewari style analysis. I have seen NO mention of win% or any AI technical details (good in my opinion). There are about 8 additional figures/explanations for each opening. And you are often given an opening sequence that you could expect in a real game.
Most of the book seems to be focused on more mundane openings, approaches, and responses. Like the keima shimari, variations of that, the 3-3 opening move, the kosumitsuke(?) against keima kakari, high kakari to 3-4, ogeima kakari, and high variation, one space pincer against 4-4 keima kakari, double kakari against 4-4, the 3-4 attachment against 4-4... I'm just flipping through the book. There are 30 lessons in total.
By the way, Japanese publishers seem to have better quality and quality control for paperbacks. They turn out pretty clean and I prefer the off-white paper. You can pick this book up from Amazon.co.jp for ¥ 1,650. Shipping is about $16 to the US west coast. I waited and ordered 3 magazines and 2 large textbooks as well and shipping was only $29. I wish I had added this relatively new Go Dictionary to my order.「用語・手筋・形」がまとめてわかる囲碁辞典 (囲碁人ブックス). Next time. I have too many Japanese Go books now. I should learn Japanese. Or maybe I should learn Go from the English books I already have. Eh, it's just a hobby.
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