Jeremy Silman has just won the 2007 ChessCafe Book-of-the-Year Award. His
Silman's Complete Endgame Course was the favorite in a worldwide internet voting round.
We wouldn't have minded if one of the other two shortlisted books, our own
From London to Elista or Quality Chess's
San Luis 2005, would have won, but it is obvious that the voters have made a very fine coice.
Silman's endgame book is revolutionary. It does not just pile one theoretical position upon the other, but it is driven by what you need to know at your present playing level. Each chapter adds on the building blocks of the preceding one.
And Silman's writing, his tone of voice, is unique. John Watson, no mean educational author himself, said (at The Week in Chess) that this book confirms Silman's status as "the king of instructional writing."
Silman is so good at getting your attention and keeping it, that you will digest this FAT book (530 pages - at just ?¢‚Äö¬¨ 24.95!) faster than the 230 pages endgame book you currently own (by the way: did you finish that one?).
Silman's Complete Endgame Course will be around for many years. But do not let that keep you from ordering
this instructional prize-winning classic today.