I know that playing is the best way to improve, but I want your opinion and personal experience on the mater of books.
Thanks
Hi fstop,fstop wrote:improve by reading a lot even if you don't play that much?
Sure, but how many games have you played during that time?RobertJasiek wrote:Before I started reading books, I was stuck in the DDK range. As soon as I started reading books (mainly theory books), I jumped to 3 dan within 17 months.
I have about 100 go books, and I haven't read them all. Several are not books for reading.fstop wrote:Please tell me, how many go books do you read, and how does it relate to your go skill?
When I was a kid I learned chess and go mainly by reading and studying. I grew up in a town of about 15,000 where there were not many chess players. Bridge was popular, and there was a local club that met on Thursday nights, but my parents did not let me play on a school night until my senior year in high school. By then I was the best chess player in town, which does not mean much, and the second best bridge player. Translating into go strength, I reckon I was 2 kyu or so at bridge. I had read maybe 5 bridge books. I dealt out a lot of hands and studied them.Is it possible to improve by reading a lot even if you don't play that much?
Who says that playing is the best way to improve? Playing can solidify bad habits. Playing against stronger players is one of the best ways to improve. 3 to 5 stones stronger is a good range. Reviewing your own games is one of the best ways to improve. Studying pro games is one of the best ways to improve.I know that playing is the best way to improve, but I want your opinion and personal experience on the mater of books.
Once I read about a professional's opinion about this subject (replaying professional games).Bill Spight wrote: Whether you play or read, the main thing is to think. To study a pro game without a book, get a computer file that you can play out. Spend at least 30 sec. thinking about each move before you play it. If the next move is obvious, think about the whole board and possible plays later on.
I've always felt this way, but have not had the skills to backup by position.Cassandra wrote: However, it would be mandatory that YOU find YOUR justification for every move played. Or at least try to do so ...
It does not matter if YOUR justification is really "correct". Most important is that YOU understand YOUR motivation for playing a move shown.
Well, it's OK if you can't figure out why the pro made a play. Understanding is not an either/or thing. Maybe you will understand the play better the next time you study the game.xed_over wrote:I've always felt this way, but have not had the skills to backup by position.Cassandra wrote: However, it would be mandatory that YOU find YOUR justification for every move played. Or at least try to do so ...
It does not matter if YOUR justification is really "correct". Most important is that YOU understand YOUR motivation for playing a move shown.