Go curriculum book series

Don't know what book to read next? Have a killer reading list for improving joseki knowledge? This is this place.
LifeIn9x9
Dies in gote
Posts: 47
Joined: Fri Mar 11, 2016 1:24 am
Rank: JP 1d
GD Posts: 0
Has thanked: 7 times
Been thanked: 5 times

Re: Go curriculum book series

Post by LifeIn9x9 »

Babelardus wrote:Hi :)

In Chess, there's a Dutch series called the "Steps Method", which has been translated to many different languages
I ordered the first step - first time in a while I bought a physical book on Amazon, too bad there aren't Kindle versions.
Babelardus
Lives with ko
Posts: 161
Joined: Thu May 26, 2016 4:09 pm
GD Posts: 0
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 25 times

Re: Go curriculum book series

Post by Babelardus »

joellercoaster wrote:Babelardus: between us, we're probably a pretty decent Go player :lol:
Heh. It's possible that my reading ability comes from the time I've played Chess. The one thing that often still confuses me is fighting with captures/recaptures and ko.
LifeIn9x9 wrote:
Babelardus wrote:Hi :)

In Chess, there's a Dutch series called the "Steps Method", which has been translated to many different languages
I ordered the first step - first time in a while I bought a physical book on Amazon, too bad there aren't Kindle versions.
I've bought the Jump Level Up and some other books in paper as well. As soon as I have to study something, or refer back and forth, I still favor paper books. I read all my novels on the Kindle, though.
User avatar
1/7,000,000,000
Dies with sente
Posts: 93
Joined: Thu Aug 30, 2012 12:41 pm
Rank: EGF mid sdk
GD Posts: 0
Has thanked: 87 times
Been thanked: 11 times

Re: Go curriculum book series

Post by 1/7,000,000,000 »

Babelardus wrote:Hi :)

In Chess, there's a Dutch series called the "Steps Method", which has been translated to many different languages. After following these books, a complete beginner in Chess will end up at playing between 2000 and 2100 ELO after step 6.
Now, i'm just a chess amateur, but i'm pretty sure in order to get 2100 ELO you need (apart from all the studying) to play countless games, analyze games, follow the chess scence etc. When i say studying, i mean know in depth hundreds of openings, endgame positions etc. so unless these books are at least 5000 pages that statement seems like bs.
dfan
Gosei
Posts: 1598
Joined: Wed Apr 21, 2010 8:49 am
Rank: AGA 2k Fox 3d
GD Posts: 61
KGS: dfan
Has thanked: 891 times
Been thanked: 534 times
Contact:

Re: Go curriculum book series

Post by dfan »

1/7,000,000,000 wrote:Now, i'm just a chess amateur, but i'm pretty sure in order to get 2100 ELO you need (apart from all the studying) to play countless games, analyze games, follow the chess scence etc. When i say studying, i mean know in depth hundreds of openings, endgame positions etc. so unless these books are at least 5000 pages that statement seems like bs.
Indeed. The information in those books is necessary but not sufficient. Still, it is nice to have it all laid out and presented nicely. I haven't read the Steps books, but a 9-book series from GM Artur Yusupov that is similar in some ways helped get me from 1800 to 2000 (and I still have 4 books to go!). In general I am a fan of "curriculum books" like these, as long as people don't get to the end and say "OK, now I should be 1 kyu!" or whatever.
User avatar
Knotwilg
Oza
Posts: 2432
Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2011 6:53 am
Rank: KGS 2d OGS 1d Fox 4d
GD Posts: 0
KGS: Artevelde
OGS: Knotwilg
Online playing schedule: UTC 18:00 - 22:00
Location: Ghent, Belgium
Has thanked: 360 times
Been thanked: 1021 times
Contact:

Re: Go curriculum book series

Post by Knotwilg »

As OtakuViking points out, no books will take you from one level to another. They act as a source of knowledge to steer your choices when playing and enhance your evaluation when reviewing. But playing and reviewing are the key activities for conscious learning. Without review, the learning may still happen but rather unconsciously and without playing ... well.

Many books have had an impact on my game, if alone as a matter of inspiration and motivation. But there is one I could and should reread yearly: Attack & Defence.

In our era, new things arise like youtube channels. I found Dwyrin's channel very inspiring and I've changed the way I play since I've been watching it. One thing he says is that the amount of actual reading required to play like a 1d is surprisingly low.
Post Reply