Please help me

Pachman's "Modern Chess Strategy" and Chernev's "Logical Chess Move by Move" are two I have read which are very good

Good Chess Books for Beginners and Beyond...
https://www.chess.com/blog/RussBell/good-chess-books-for-beginners-and-beyond

You might consider Play Winning Chess, Winning Chess Tactics and Winning Chess Strategies, (in that order) all by Yasser Seiraman. You can get them on Amazon for ~$20 a piece.
Best of luck to you.
I find at this rating a lot of what gets players isn't a lack of knowledge, but not looking at the board long enough to apply what they know. Frequently they give away pieces for free. Giving away a rook does more harm than a strong opening can help. This is why rooting these mistakes out of your game first is so important. Just knowing to move a piece out of the way or not put it on a square it can be taken. It sounds obvious, but those simple errors are almost always the #1 issue I see pop up.
You might consider Play Winning Chess, Winning Chess Tactics and Winning Chess Strategies, (in that order) all by Yasser Seiraman. You can get them on Amazon for ~$20 a piece.
Best of luck to you.
Vous pouvez aussi obtenir ces livres gratuitement sur le site: pdfdrive.com

All you have to do is read books, watch videos, and practice playing chess and you might be one of the best players.

Learn basic endgames, not the dumb unusual ones like King and knight and bishop vs. King. Then find an opening (do NOT spend too much time on this. Just find a nice e4/d4 opening and find counters as black. I don't recommend you play any other first move.) Learn the basic tactics, and you don't need chess books to learn chess. Some of the best chess players (GM Reuben Fine for example) Never read or barely learn from chess books. After you passed the simple stuff, play a while and you'll improve if you learn from the mistakes you make.

If you are below 1000 Rating. Your main problem is Blunders. If you just ask last move of my opponent what does it attack? Is he taking my piece next turn if I don't move it? That will help a lot.
Strategy is good but I find its helpful when you don't blunder in 1 turn, meaning your opponent played bishop move to attack rook, and you didn't even see that bishop move will take your rook and you forgot about it. Next turn your opponent will capture that piece.
2nd question to ask is The piece you are moving will it be captured when you place it there. Look very carefully the WHOLE BOARD to see if you move a piece there it won't be captured. Its very hard for beginner to see Bg2 attack rook on Ra8. So beginner might play Rd8 to Ra8 not noticing the Bishop on g2 square attacks the rook on a8. Next turn your opponent captures it. These are the simple things to avoid will get out of 1k zone.
Between 1000-1200. I find ask the same question did the last move of my opponent attack anything? If not, will that last piece move forward into your territory. (White territory : Row 1-4. Black territory: Row: 5-8). If the piece does to your territory will that piece help with checkmating you? or create a fork so you lose a piece?
After 1200, its time to read up on strategy / Outposts / Bad bishops vs Good bishops / Mate with 2 bishops / Choose 1 opening for White and Choose 2 opening for Black against d4 and e4 from White and remember pawn / piece setup. If you don't remember the move order but remember where the pieces needs to be just make it so your opponent can't attack that piece when you play your setup.

You might consider Play Winning Chess, Winning Chess Tactics and Winning Chess Strategies, (in that order) all by Yasser Seiraman. You can get them on Amazon for ~$20 a piece.
Best of luck to you.
Vous pouvez aussi obtenir ces livres gratuitement sur le site: pdfdrive.com
Oui, bon point!

I honestly learned from playing with my family and before I started chess I played checkers and if you need me to translate this just say so\
You might consider Play Winning Chess, Winning Chess Tactics and Winning Chess Strategies, (in that order) all by Yasser Seiraman. You can get them on Amazon for ~$20 a piece.
Best of luck to you.
Vous pouvez aussi obtenir ces livres gratuitement sur le site: pdfdrive.com
Yes, good point!
Yeah, I use that site a lot now. I wish I knew about it when I first started playing chess, haha.
Also, Yasser Seirawan's books are excellent. They were my first chess books, and I loved them. Super instructive and fun to read