Kirby wrote:* Top 1% (3 books)
Isn't Top 1% cheating the question? No English release unfortunately. One of these days I'll have to see those books of yours because it somehow got to 14 books in the Japanese edition.
Kirby wrote:* Top 1% (3 books)
oren wrote:Kirby wrote:* Top 1% (3 books)
Isn't Top 1% cheating the question? No English release unfortunately. One of these days I'll have to see those books of yours because it somehow got to 14 books in the Japanese edition.
Kirby wrote:oren wrote:Kirby wrote:* Top 1% (3 books)
Isn't Top 1% cheating the question? No English release unfortunately. One of these days I'll have to see those books of yours because it somehow got to 14 books in the Japanese edition.
Sorry, I didn't notice that it indicated "English" go books. In that case, I'll say that I simply like Yilun Yang's (English) books.
Boidhre wrote:5. Opening Theory Made Easy - If you only read one theory book at this level, this is the one. It's a lot more subtle than it appears, it'll still be relevant to you as a weak sdk.
Hanmanchu wrote:The books which helped me improve the most:
1. Graded Go Problems (Vol. III)
2. Tesuji
3. The Endgame
4. Dictionary of Basic Joseki
5. GO: Invasion & Reduction
#3 really helped me to win more games. #4 really is a selection of good and bad examples, as someone above mentioned. #5 It explained the concept of reduction, and I have read it over and over again.
Of course I read Lessons in the fundamentals of go, but I dont know how much I gained from it.
NoSkill wrote:1.lessons in the fundamentals of go
2. Improve your intuition series (cheap and small individually, better as a whole)
3. Invincible
4. Lee Chang ho tesuji set
5. None really decided.. I haven't seen a book that would be worth getting that doesn't overlap with the above. Maybe elementary go series life and death?