hl782 wrote:hmm interesting - just basing off the book title though, is it very different from Kageyama's fundamental principles?
On another note - Two more victories and officially a SDK now!
Congratulations on your quick rise to SDK. Your reading must be quite strong for your level, based on having finished 1001 l&d problems. I'm working through that at the moment, after having given up on graded go problems vol. 3 once I hit the life and death problems at the end. My feeling being that mostly 1001 is a bit easier than those problems.
Kgeyamas book on fundamentals and the Yilun Yang one share little in common other than titles. Yangs book gives a lot more in specific advice, variations etc., includes a lot more diagrams and examples of play, and has problems at the end of each section. Quite a lot of the book is about the opening moves, pincers, and the early middle game. Also a nice section on types of invasions and reductions as well as the section I posted a part of. In my mind Kageyamas book offers more on the mentality or thinking that goes into moves, without giving as many specific examples, and helps with how to study and a brief overview or introduction of important topics.
Really the two books aren't directly comparable. Both would make it on to a top 5 theory books list for me at this stage, along with Attack and Defense and Opening Theory Made Easy.
. Also there's the ko at
. I've no idea if it was worth the risk for white but with his threats against the R14 stones you run the risk of having to break in to the centre anyway except with white much stronger.
white already seems well placed to negate centre influence so I would look to try and take the bottom side instead.