Chernev's book is rightly recommended a lot in these forums. I would say even up to 1400 otb or so, with less benefit being derived after that.
I suppose less wordiness can be laid at the feet of a lazy author. Sometimes the target audience is skilled enough to understand what's happening minus a lot of text, making the abbreviated explanations or evaluations still very sensible.
I enjoy even paragraphs though. Evans and a bunch of GMs had a book out many years ago with all words of sage advice and observation, and no moves at all as I recall.
Chernev's 'Logical Chess: Move by Move' is a classic. A wonderful book for almost all standards of chess player.
The style has been reproduced by chess authors such as Neil McDonald & Robert Snyder. And again they are good reads and very instructive.
Why aren't there more chess titles in that style? Is it that a chess book can only be 'value for money' if it gives more annotation/less explanation per penny/cent?
How many times have we looked at a position where after following a line of annotation we are told " and White/Black stands better".
No explanation of why they stand better.
Any thoughts out there or am I very much in a minority?