go books
home | browse | all books | search | links | about | feedback

Graded Go Problems For Beginners Volume III

By Kano Yoshinori 9d

Cover show/hide

Details show/hide

Title Graded Go Problems For Beginners Volume III
Author Kano Yoshinori 9d
Translator Richard Bozulich
Publishers Ishi Press, Kiseido
Codes h5, K48
Date 1985, 1997
ISBN 4-906574-48-3
Pages 199
Dimensions 8 1/4. x 5 3/4. - 210mm x 147mm
Series Info Graded Go Problems For Beginners
Publishers's URL http://kiseido.com/Begin.htm

Blurb show/hide

are the ideal books for players who have just learned the rules of go, bridging the gap between a beginner's book and some of the more advanced elementary books.

The almost 1500 problems these four volumes contain thoroughly drill the reader in the fundamentals of the game. Once he has finished studying these four books, he will have mastered the elements of capturing and defending stones, life and death of groups, elementary tactics, the opening and the endgame, thus laying a solid foundation for his future progress in the game.

Contents show/hide

PREFACE ...iv
GLOSSARY ...v
PROBLEMS
I INTERMEDIATE PROBLEMS
LEVEL ONE ...1
 
II INTERMEDIATE PROBLEMS
LEVEL TWO ...19
 
III INTERMEDIATE PROBLEMS
LEVEL THREE
LIFE AND DEATH PROBLEMS ...36
 
IV INTERMEDIATE PROBLEMS
LEVEL FOUR
LIFE AND DEATH PROBLEMS ...58
 
PART TWO: ANSWERS ...81
 
GO ASSOCIATIONS ...200

Reviews show/hide

Review by David Carlton show/hide

Review Author David Carlton Reviewer Strength 1 kyu
Author's Email carlton@bactrian.org website http://www.bactrian.org/~carlton/

These are volumes of go problems, and they have the virtue that they start off at a much easier level than any other problem books out there. The volumes claim to be for 30-25 kyu, 25-20 kyu, 20-15 kyu, and 15 kyu and stronger, and the early problems really are suitable for complete novices - the first problems ask you to capture stones that are already in atari, for example. The last two volumes are more difficult - I'd place volume 3 at 15-10 kyu and a 10 kyu would find much of volume 4 to be quite challenging, but there's lots of good stuff in them. I'd recommend these books for anybody who's getting started: it's important to get hands-on practice with go concepts that you're learning about, and these books are a great way to do that. (Recent ads for these books have them at 30-25 kyu, 25-15 kyu, 15-8 kyu, and 8-3 kyu; that seems reasonable to me.)



Got something to add? your own review!