p2501 wrote:Seems to depend on the type of player. Some find exact examples more and variations more enlightening. Lessons of the fundamentals touches more on the principles and general concept of playing go. Kind of comparable to Otake Hideos Opening Theory made easy I think. Both very good books in my opinion.
I agree with you that Otakes Opening Theory Made Easy is a very good book, in my opinion even the best book about the opening for beginners. But then I don't find anything comparable between his book and Kageyamas. Personally, I think they are the exact opposite.
Where Otake explains one subject to sufficient detail for the audience, Kageyama jumps across the whole field of Go theory wihtout any context and explains very little but rants when the reader has not yet understand what he doesn't even try to explain.
Where Otake reasons, Kageyama gets upset why he even has to bother explaining such simple things.
Of course you a right, it depends on which type of teacher you like. If I read Kageyama I can't help but picture a teacher coming to class to let it watch a documentary while he leaves for coffee and a smoke.
He is not even funny with his ramblings (contrary to the video of the guy teaching japanese, which Araban posted somewhere).