• Review: Mastering Basic Corner Shapes - Step-by-step

    From Robert Jasiek@21:1/5 to All on Fri Apr 28 13:41:32 2023
    GENERAL SPECIFICATION

    * Title: Mastering Basic Corner Shapes - Step-by-step
    * Author: Young Sun Yoon
    * Publisher: Korea Baduk Association et al
    * Edition: 2022-12-25
    * Language: English
    * Price: EUR 0 (plus any commission or postage)
    * Contents: life and death
    * ISBN: none
    * Printing: good
    * Layout: good
    * Editing: intermediate to weak
    * Pages: 270
    * Size: 153mm x 224mm
    * Diagrams per Page on Average: 2
    * Method of Teaching: selected examples
    * Read when EGF: 7k - 1k
    * Subjective Rank Improvement: o
    * Subjective Topic Coverage: -
    * Subjective Aims' Achievement: +

    OVERVIEW

    The book Mastering Basic Corner Shapes - Step-by-step contains life
    and death problems, answer diagrams and accompanying text. Besides
    short introduction, diagram index and appendix, the main part
    comprises 50 chapters on 229 pages. 36 chapters contain the problems
    while 14 chapters refer to their joseki origins. In the former, every
    chapter has 4 problems and a brief summary. Subtracting one duplicate,
    there are 143 problems. Within each chapter, the difficulty increases
    from the first to the fourth problem typically with a position a few
    moves earlier. Apart from the appendix, there is no structured theory.

    PROBLEM SELECTION

    The book claims to present basic corner shapes and this is mostly
    correct. Of course, no single book can cover all shapes. The curios
    omission, however, is the most frequent basic corner shape resulting
    from the 3-3 under 4-4 invasion. Otherwise, the author has selected
    the shapes well: they occur rather frequently and offer a decent
    variety of techniques. The selection differs from All About Life and
    Death and more basic life and death books so makes more shapes
    accessible to the English literature.

    ANSWERS

    For the four problems of a chapter, there are altogether about half a
    dozen to a dozen answer diagrams with short commenting texts, which
    contains hardly any further variations. The diagrams show solutions, variations, failures, or sometimes additional analysis.

    The author speaks of the most relevant sequences in the diagrams. Some
    of them are relevant indeed but the reader must not fall under the
    illusion of sufficient diagrams. The greatest weakness of the book is
    the missing variations. The reader must read about two or three times
    as many relevant variations as shown. As a related aspect, the author
    mentions visualisation, memorisation and neuroscience in the
    introduction and appendix but fails to explain tactical reading and
    its decision-making, which would also consider the missing variations.
    A reader knowing tactical reading and reading all relevant variations
    can, however, profit more from the book by overcoming the author's or publisher's desire of pretending easy teaching and prominent layout.

    READERSHIP

    Some of the problems might also be suitable for 10k - 8k players but
    such readers face the difficulties of the missing variations and
    presumed knowledge, although the appendix, which introduces bent-4, 10000-year-ko and approach ko, might mitigate this a bit if read in
    between. A few problems have some variations of intermediate
    difficulty suitable for low dans but a dan would not read the whole
    book just for them or a basic type of ko previously neglected in other
    texts. Hence, the core readership is 7k - 1k. A dedicated low dan
    should not condemn the book though, as it is a reminder of what he
    should know but probably partially might be missing. A reader can
    first solve the problems and then consult the book again for
    memorisation.

    MISTAKES

    Although the book must have undergone some proofreading, there are
    many minor mistakes of language or sometimes contents but they do not
    obstruct reading significantly. An accompanying leaf only lists a few
    of them. There are occasional relevant mistakes of contents, such as
    swapped diagrams, a suboptimal solution disregarding the endgame, a
    few terms on ko types and counting versus scoring used wrongly, and consequences of shapes in the appendix for rules application. A reader
    of a free book can easily forgive such but should not blindly trust
    everything.

    AVAILABILITY

    The author has been enabled to create the book so that it can be free.
    However, it might not be easily available because reasonable postage
    cannot be offered everywhere these days. Therefore, you might have to
    await distribution at some large tournaments or possibly pay some
    commission to a retailer.

    CONCLUSION

    Mastering Basic Corner Shapes - Step-by-step is a welcome addition to
    the English literature offering suitable practice for problem solving
    but should show more relevant variations, include the most frequent
    class of shapes and receive better proofreading.

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)