jts wrote:What a thorough and helpful review. Question: have you seen the Second Book of Go? To what extent does First Fundamentals dominate SBG as a book to recommend to new players?
Sorry for the late response. My plane of life has gotten a bit in turbulences lately, so that kept me on my toes (or rather, on the belly).
The SBG, well, I never actually liked it very much, but I'm not sure I read it at the right time. To me, it seemed too unfocused, too little material for most topics to be really useful. FF is more "focused" (a lot more material, too), but the difficulty is also quite varied, so it's hard to say for who it really is exactly.
Basically, SBG is like a plate of food samples and teasers, and FF is a box of high energy food pellets. Both will nourish you in some form, but neither are really comparable, cover the same ground or even aim at the same target group. SBG is an intro book, FF is a work book. The material/price ratio of FF is definitely significantly better.
I think if I had to recommend a few books to beginners, I'd suggest that web course (whatever it is called!) or one of the first books, then a problem collection and Opening Theory Made Easy (I really like that book), and then First Fundamentals. FF stays with you a long time, so it's a bit like A&D, I guess (not saying they are the same -- just in terms of how much you can milk them).