Board Games Books

Life And Death Board Game

$13.50

VN:F [1.9.7_1111]
Follow up this rating with your own written review below...
Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)

5 Reveiws for Life And Death Board Game

  1. I find this book very helpful. I was looking for basic principles to apply in various situations. This book does that. I’m still only 2/3 through but the lessons learned so far had an immediate benefit; I’d say 2-3 kyu improvement overnight. I’m currently at 12 k.

    Amazon User Rating: 5 / 5

    VA:F [1.9.7_1111]
    Rate This Review
    Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)
  2. Jill Malter says:

    Having recently read a few books that tried to answer the question, “What is Life?” I was glad to find this one! The answer is simple. Life is two eyes! If you have only one eye, you are dead.

    That is why the door group is as dead as a, um, doornail. It only produces one eye.

    You can’t enjoy a game of go unless you have a pretty good idea if your groups are dead or alive. And this book is good at teaching you to see which shapes can form two eyes and which shapes can not. The chapters and quizzes in this book are excellent training. If you can answer the “status?” questions correctly, you are well on your way towards doing some serious damage to many of your opponent’s more dubious formations.

    Once you have learned the elements of go and have played some games, what comes next? Well, you need to learn a little about fuseki and joseki. And tesuji (or you won’t be able to understand this book). But the first topic you need to learn really well is this one. And that’s where this book comes in handy.
    Amazon User Rating: 5 / 5

    VA:F [1.9.7_1111]
    Rate This Review
    Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)
  3. Mika Pihlamo says:

    This book introduces different life and death situations and variations of them. Actually the book has 36 groups of different shapes of life and death situations. Every group has the same vital characters which are explained with few words and examples. After that thera are a few problems and pretty good answers to problems. This happens again in every chapter.

    This is a book you HAVE TO READ WITH GO-BOARD! You should try to solve problems, that gives you good overview what is important in every shape. I found it educationnal to “play” problems with someome. Both try to kill or save a group. That worked for me and my friend.

    This book is good for a player who has already played a few games and notices he/she is loseing groups which he/she thinks should be alive.

    I learned to notice new good and bad shapes in my games.
    Amazon User Rating: 5 / 5

    VA:F [1.9.7_1111]
    Rate This Review
    Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)
  4. After the first 20 pages, I was making 20-point plays

    in games that I would never have seen before this

    book. Whole categories of life and death problems

    can be reduced to simple questions about the shape of

    their potential eyespace. Having this in your favor

    is something that every player needs to know.

    Some of the problems are fairly tricky at the 10kyu level.
    Amazon User Rating: 5 / 5

    VA:F [1.9.7_1111]
    Rate This Review
    Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)
  5. Shorebird says:

    Introduction:

    Life and death is one of the critical elements in the/a game of go, but what exactly is it? It is simply whether a player’s stones are captured or prevented from being captured (though I won’t go into a deeper explanation here). It’s simple, yet very important. To become a strong player, an important fundamental is to be strong in life and death, and if you ask any go player (amatuer or professional) how, the answer will be “Solve lots of life and death problems.”

    Solving problems helps strengthen a go player’s reading ability, and with repetition, the shapes in the problems will be more familiar to the player when they appear in his games (reading is when a player mentally forsees how the game will continue, thinking about different continuations, and to the find the best result possible for both sides). These fundamental shapes also appear in life and death.

    The Book:

    Content:

    Normally, books about life and death are simply “problem books,” which simply contain life and death problems. Life and Death (the book) is a bit different, and is mainly concerned about the fundamental shapes that appear.

    The book begins with a small introduction about life and death, and defines some common terms that the reader will need to know. Moving along, each chapter is devoted to a specific shape, or theme. A chapter is begun by introducing the reader to the shape and showing them some of the common continuations that can occur. On the next page, the reader is put to the test, and is given some problems to solve.

    Difficulty:

    N.B.: The content in this book is aimed at stronger players who are at least in the single digit kyu range (9k up), and will not be suitable for beginners. For beginners, some books I recommend are the Learn to Play Go series by Janice Kim, to learn about the basics of life and death, and for life and death problems, the Graded Go Problems for Beginners series by Kano Yoshinori and 1001 Life and Death Problems by Richard Bozulich.

    Summary:

    Pros:

    * Smooth process: I like how the reader is introduced to the shape and it’s continuation, then is given problems to tackle himself.

    * It is kind of a quasi-reference book, especially for the corner shapes, but is definitely not a life and death dictionary.

    * Size: Though it’s not related to the content of the book, it’s a small book, which is a handy thing.

    Cons:

    * Price: My major gripe is the price, which unfortunately is the norm for go books translated into English. But still, $15 for this tiny book…

    Conclusion:

    Life and Death is an excellent book for the stronger kyu player to learn about the more difficult fundamental shapes that appear in games.
    Amazon User Rating: 5 / 5

    VA:F [1.9.7_1111]
    Rate This Review
    Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)

Write a review

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>