Chess Book Review

Turbo-Charge Your Tactics 2

Vladimir Grabinsky, Mykhaylo Oleksiyenko

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How difficult it is to read the book without using a board. A book with 10/10 readability is a bedtime story, a book with 1/10 is a puzzle book full of variations. Readability doesn’t represent the quality of the book.
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Usefulness is a measure of how useful the book is for chess improvement within the topic it covers. Books with a high usefulness score should help you improve quicker than those with a low score.
This chess puzzle book consists of esthetically pleasing and incredibly instructive problems taken from the games of World Champions and their challengers. Turbo-Charge Your Tactics is a unique puzzle book that focuses on developing your calculation, visualization and imagination, but it puts an emphasis on weird and astonishing positions and moves, which makes it almost one of a kind. It’s divided into two volumes. The first volume consists of problems from games of various players, starting with Mykhaylo Oleksiyenko’s games, and including a wide range of other games, from lichess bullet to the games of 2800 players. Turbo-Charge Your Tactics 2 consists of problems from games of World Champions and their challengers. Both volumes are meant for beginner and intermediate players, and I think they would be a great resource for anyone up to 1800 FIDE.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Volume 2 consists of 197 problems. Each problem is unique, instructive, you may even say weird, as an emphasis seems to have been put on beauty and uniqueness of positions. The annotations are well written and they explain the core ideas for each position well. The workbook is suited for anyone below 1800 FIDE. Unlike the first volume, which covered a wide range of games and players, the second workbook covers problems from games played by World Champions, making it, in my opinion, slightly less “wild” and unique.

Grabinsky is becoming one of my favorite authors, despite having written only a handful of books. Being a world-class chess coach, his chess books carry his incredible teaching style and you can tell that he knows how people learn chess, what they struggle with, and what it takes for chess players to improve. That is very visible in Turbo-Charge Your Tactics. The two volumes are the works of Grabinsky, and his very successful student, GM Mykhaylo Oleksiyenko.

The problems come from incredibly instructive games, and many of the positions featured are, simply put, weird. For example, those from Tal’s games in which he managed to show his attacking genius will force you to think like Tal! Now that, multiplied by 197, makes this a very valuable book.

About the Authors

Turbo-Charge Your Tactics 2: The authors, IM Vladimir Alexandrovich Grabinsky (left), and GM Mykhaylo Volodymyrovych Oleksiyenko (right)
The authors, IM Vladimir Alexandrovich Grabinsky (left), and GM Mykhaylo Volodymyrovych Oleksiyenko (right)

Grabinsky is an IM, and more known for his works and coaching. He is the coach of the Ukrainian youth team and has had astonishing success throughout his career with many of his students becoming Grandmasters; Andrei Volokitin, the co-author of Perfect your Chess, Yuriy Kryvoruchko, Martyn Kravtsiv, the author of 400 Chess Strategy Puzzles, Yaroslav Zherebukh, Yuri Vovk, Andrey Vovk, Mikhailo Oleksienko, who has co-authored Turbo-Charge Your Tactics with Grabinsky, Nataliya Buksa, Vita Kryvoruchko, Myroslava Hrabinska and Kateryna Matseyko.

Mykhaylo Oleksiyenko is one of Grabinsky’s famous students. He became a Grandmaster at the age of 19 and has had many tournament successes. Oleksiyenko won in clear first in the Summer Olomouc Open in 2005, Breizh Masters tournament in 2006 and 2007, and Instalplast Open in 2006, and in 2015 he won the Karen Asrian Memorial in Jermuk. He also holds a Ph.D. in mathematics.

Problem Difficulty

Unlike Perfect Your Chess, in which Grabinsky assembled a collection of master-level problems, both volumes of Turbo-Charge Your Tactics are aimed at players who haven’t reached advanced level yet. They are divided not by theme or tactical motif, but by who was playing the game.

Personally, I don’t see much point to that structure, but there it is. I also don’t think that the difficulty increases as you progress through the chapters, at least not significantly, which is the case for many puzzle books, such as Aagaard’s GM Preparation series.

Turbo-Charge Your Tactics 2, Grabinsky, Oleksiyenko, 2005; An example of a problem.
Turbo-Charge Your Tactics 2, Grabinsky, Oleksiyenko, 2005; An example of a problem.

Quality of Annotations

The annotations are perfect. As is the case with his previous book, Grabinsky managed to explain things on a level useful for masters but understandable for lower rated players as well. That is what I like most about the book.

A single line and a unique solution is given for most problems, with a few sidelines thrown in here and there but without infinite branching. I would say that the two volumes of Turbo-Charge Your Tactics can be solved without a board by anyone above 1800 FIDE. The annotations are extensive, and the variations easy to follow, making this a perfect “bus book”, my term for depicting books that you can take on a trip and know you can learn from without having to have a board set up next to you. For lower rated players, following without a board will be difficult, so use a board.

Turbo-Charge Your Tactics 2, Grabinsky, Oleksiyenko, 2005; An example of a solution with annotations.
Turbo-Charge Your Tactics 2, Grabinsky, Oleksiyenko, 2005; An example of a solution with annotations.

Conclusion

Turbo-Charge Your Tactics 2 is one of the most useful chess puzzle books for improving players I’ve come across. It’s perfect for anyone from beginner level to the 1800s. It focuses on expanding your tactical horizons, imagination and creative thinking, skills that every strong player possesses, and what every improving player must develop in order to climb the ranks.

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