Bruce Pandolfini (born September 17, 1947) is an American chess author, teacher, and coach. A USCF national master, he is generally considered to be America’s most experienced chess teacher. As a coach and trainer, Pandolfini has possibly conducted more chess sessions than anyone in the world. By the summer of 2015 he had given an estimated 25,000 private and group lessons.
It's a thin book that overgeneralizes in trying to connect to chess and business examples in each case. Overall, I would still highly recommend it as a meta-cognitive refresher on how to think about thinking and it has some great stories about chess grandmasters and the lessons told through their games, but not so many connections to specific business examples or lessons. Some solid strategic lessons learned, several really great quotes that I'm going to go back and highlight and save.
I was struggling to remember the exact details about the university I toured in Philly before my computer gave up. It's not important in comparison with how Pandolfini had laid out these fifteen principles with a droll "chessary" (glossary) at the end to explain what everything means.
You, too, may be able to pwn your adversary if you harness these concepts! What I liked most about this book was its deceptively simple title.
(I am still wary of getting defeated at random no matter how many of these books I read.)
I enjoyed the short stories about some of the famous chess games and the strategies that grandmasters employed in them. It mentions among others Alekhine, Morphy, Capablanca, and triggered my interest to explore those particular games more. It doesn’t teach chess tactics and there’s not a single diagram of a chessboard in it or any chess notation. If that’s what you’re looking for that not the book for that.
The book purports to draw parallels between chess and business, it does so with a brief single paragraph at the end of each chapters, and I think that’s plenty sufficient.
The queen is the powerful piece on board but still can be beaten by weakened king and few pawns.That's if you know the plan and execute. Use sacrifice only when you can gain something in return. The most critical mistake in chess is the one you thought is not.
The book elaborates the chess game into digestible chunks and the describe the chess in psychological knowledge based form.
Stick to Pandolfini reflections on chess. Stories and how he tied these to unique strategies is a 4.5. Application to business situations/strategies/scenarios, too generic and under-developed to make much sense, a 2. Still, I enjoyed the book and will re-read - it’s brief and historically interesting as it relates … to chess.
Nothing about this book is revelational or revolutionary, but since it’s so short, if you like chess, you won’t feel like you’ve wasted your time with it.
Good advice outlined from a skilled and experienced chess teacher. This book tries to weave the rigors of chess principles and structure to shed light on lessons that can be employed in the everyday world of business. It is instructive on a rather elementary basis but worth the read especially if you are a fan of chess. There is a lot of time tested wisdom in his narrative and is a good reference guide to revisit.
Libro: ISBN 978-88-453-1647-0 terminata la lettura. Ci è voluto tanto perché non era per nulla un libro scorrevole da leggere però adesso posso finalmente dedicarmi ad altre faccende e letture molto più utili. La copertina fronte-retro è Plastificata Colorata Rigidissima (P.C.R.). Libro molto inutile per chi pratica gli scacchi con regolarità nei tornei ufficiali FIDE FSI perché poche nozioni nuove ci sono e le analogie con il business sono solo accennate e sarebbero poi tutte da verificare.
This is a chess master's take on the business world. The author explains chess strategy and relates it to business. This link is a bit of a stretch but not unlike Blanchard's books. It reminds me of "Whale Done" in some respects. Not everything is a direct link to business or leadership. On the other hand, the author's encyclopedic knowledge of chess was fascinating.
I liked this book, mainly because of the chess anecdotes, but I think the book is too short and the strategies too general for them to be useful in business or life. I have yet to try these "strategies" at chess.