Tag: chess books

  • 15 Unique Gifts for the Chess Lover in Your Life

    15 Unique Gifts for the Chess Lover in Your Life

    15 Unique Gifts for the Chess Lover in Your Life

    So your loved one won’t stop talking about chess. They’re quoting niche streamers you’ve never heard of, they’re addicted to playing blitz online, and as much as you want to understand their passion, it just isn’t for you.

    We at Chess is Hard have you covered. We know firsthand the chess obsession and what a true chess-head wants. Don’t feel lost in the woods anymore. Here are the chess gifts that your obsessed loved one will adore.

    As an Amazon Affiliate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

    1. Silman’s Complete Endgame Course

    This book is for the chess lover who is obsessed not just with playing, but with learning as well. Silman’s Complete Endgame Course is the leading endgame course that’s accessible for all levels. Starting from the simplest principles and working to the most advanced, this book has a progressive format, perfect for players of all levels. This format encourages true mastery, with each chapter building on the previous, encouraging you not to move on until you truly understand it.

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    2. House of Staunton Chess Set

    At some point in their chess journey, every budding chess player comes to appreciate the brilliance and simplicity of a House of Staunton chess set. These sets are the perfect upgrade from your cheap, plastic Walmart chess sets. They come in a wide variety of colors, so you can find something fun and customized to your loved one’s tastes.

    They meet all the requirements for USCF and FIDE tournament use, so even if your loved one isn’t a tournament player yet, they have the option in the future. The pieces are also triple-weighted, a sneakily luxurious feature that ensures your pieces never blow away or get knocked over.

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    3. This Tasteful Chess Mug

    The majority of chess fanatics want to be chess fanatics without wearing it on an obnoxious t-shirt or touting goofy chess-themed merch. This mug is a nice, subtle piece of kitchenware with a minimal design, perfect for the more low-key chess lover in your life.

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    4. A Subtle Checkered Blanket

    Another subtle way to pay homage to the chess obsession without being too on-the-nose is to get your loved one something checkered. Believe it or not, chess players sometimes subconsciously gravitate towards checkered-print items, without relating it to their love of the game. A checkered blanket is a tasteful piece of home decor that will make your loved one think of their beloved hobby.

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    5. Magnetic Travel Chess Set

    If your chess-loving friend already has a few sets they love, a nice, unique chess gift can be a magnetic chess set. These chess sets are miniature, so they travel well and feature magnetic pieces that promise to stay put.

    Another sneaky feature of these boards is that they can be used for unique home decor. If you attach the board to the wall, you can magnetize the pieces to the board for a piece of vertical chess wall art that you can actually play.

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    6. 4-Player Chess Set

    Some chess players love variants, and some hate them. Four-player chess is a unique chess variant that’s perfect for a bigger group setting. If your loved one frequents a chess club, this could be a great gift for them to bring to their club. It could also be a way for them to introduce chess into their friend group, allowing for a more dynamic four-player match with a more even playing field than isolated two-player games.

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    7. This Sophisticated Chess Clock

    In this day and age, many chess players begin their chess journey online before transitioning to over-the-board chess. If your loved one is still playing most of their games online, getting them a chess clock could help pique their interest in finding an in-person chess community.

    If your loved one is already an avid in-person chess player and loves tournaments, this chess clock is more sophisticated than most, perfect for the more serious tournament player.

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    8. Chess Opening Playing Cards

    These playing cards feature a dual purpose. They can be used as a standard deck of cards for any type of card game you imagine. However, what makes them perfect for a chess lover is their educational potential. Each card features a different chess opening. Chess players can use the cards to study opening theory or play Go Fish, depending on their ambition level for the day.

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    9. Knight Glasses Holder

    Once again, this gift is two-for-one. Both a stylish piece of chess-themed decor and a glasses holder, this knight statue is perfect for your chess-obsessed loved one.

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    10. Chess Piece Bookends

    These chess piece bookends are subtle enough to look nice in any home without being obnoxious while still paying homage to chess. Bundle these bookends with a few chess books to jumpstart your loved one’s chess library and show them you encourage their hobby.

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    11. A Cheeky Chess Candle

    This cheeky chess candle is a fantastic stocking stuffer for your chess-loving friend. It’s something they can actually use, rather than just a piece of home decor or yet another chess set. When in doubt, you can’t go wrong with a candle, and this one is personalized to your friend’s interests.

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    12. The Tao of Chess

    The Tao of Chess is an easy read for the chess lover in your life. If they are getting interested in playing chess online and watching chess content but aren’t ready to study in-depth chess material, this book is for them. Its unique style makes chess principles incredibly digestible and fun to read. The book is easy to flip through and doesn’t require intense focus, making it a great side-table book as well. Even non-chess lovers can enjoy this book.

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    13. Art of Attack in Chess

    On the flip side, the Art of Attack in Chess is for the chess lover dedicated to improvement. This book will help an improving chess player understand the principles of good attacks, helping them know when to attack and how.

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    14. Rook Costume

    As a gag gift, get your loved one this rook costume. After all, they probably don’t already have one.

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    15. Chess Table

    Chess tables can be both useful, fun, and decorative. You can find a sophisticated and unique chess table that matches your friend’s decor. You may want to consult with them on this one first, just to make sure it will fit in their space.

    A nice-looking chess table can make a perfect living room end table with a fun twist. Who wouldn’t want decor that doubles as their favorite game?

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    Showing your loved one you support their hobby is a great way to get closer. Giving your chess-obsessed friend any of these gifts will make their day.

  • 5 Best Chess Books for Beginners (2025)

    5 Best Chess Books for Beginners (2025)

    Top Chess Books for Beginners

    When you’re just starting out at chess, the number of books can be overwhelming. Some go deep into theory you’re not ready for. Others are so simple you might finish them without really improving. These five books strike a good balance — clear teaching, helpful exercises, enough guidance to level up without too much fluff or jargon. If you’re new or just getting serious about improving, these are some of the best.

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    1. How to Win at Chess by Levy Rozman

    What it offers:
    This book is built for players roughly from 0 to ~1200 Elo — total beginners through low-intermediate. There are two main parts: Part I for beginners (0-800), Part II for intermediate (800-1200). It covers everything from rules and piece movement to basic openings, simple endgames, tactics, and strategy. It also includes lots of diagrams, some color, and QR codes that link out to online content.

    What it does well:

    • The writing is very approachable — not assuming you know much, it explains in plain language.
    • Good structure: the chapters are ordered from very basic up through more advanced concepts. That helps build confidence.
    • The tactics section (especially the heuristic “CCA” — Checks, Captures, Attacks) is strong; many reviewers say that part shines.

    Best for: players who want a solid foundation, someone who knows little or nothing of chess, or someone who’s played casually and wants to get serious up to ~1200 Elo.

    Buy this on Amazon


    2. Bobby Fischer Teaches Chess

    What it offers:
    This one is a classic. It uses a programmed learning method, meaning you get a puzzle or question, you try to answer, if wrong the book explains why, then you try again. The focus is very much on basic tactics/checkmating ideas rather than the full spectrum of chess theory. It doesn’t require knowing standard chess notation: many diagrams and simple descriptions do the job.

    What it does well:

    • It’s excellent for absolute beginners who don’t even know forks, skewers, pins, etc. It builds pattern recognition in a very hands-on, immediate way.
    • Because of the immediate feedback loop (try, check, learn), it helps keep up motivation: you see success quickly.

    Best for: someone who is brand new, or a young learner, or someone who wants a gentle first exposure to what makes you win games tactically.

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    3. Winning Chess Exercises for Kids by Viktoria Ni

    What it offers:
    This is a workbook targetted mainly at children aged ~8-12, but actually useful for adults who like visual, exercise-based learning. It includes over 350 exercises, annotated diagrams, step-by-step instructions, growing difficulty, and explanations of what tactics and strategies look like in practice.

    What it does well:

    • Diagrams and visual explanations are strong. That’s especially helpful if you struggle with moving pieces in your head.
    • Exercises are fun, not dry: the puzzles are engaging and are structured so that they reinforce what you just learned.
    • The book doesn’t talk down to the reader. Even though for kids, many reviewers say an adult with basic knowledge still learns something.

    Best for: kids, teens, or adult beginners who prefer doing puzzles/exercises rather than reading dense explanations. Also good as a supplementary book.

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    4. The Chess Blueprint by Daniel Redford

    What I found & what seems to be promised:
    This one presents itself as a step-by-step system to transform how you think about chess: from mindset to analysis, to a more complete approach. It claims to help with everything from practical openings to tactical mastery.

    What it does well:

    • Good if you want a framework: not just “move this, then that,” but “why you move this” — more about thinking, planning, not just tactics.
    • Could be valuable for somebody who’s moved past just knowing the rules and wants to understand how to decide what to play.

    Best for: beginners who want something more than “just tactics” — someone wanting to think like a chess player, not only “what piece moves where.”

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    5. How to Play Chess for Beginners

    What it offers:
    This is one of the more basic guides, meant for people who are starting completely from scratch. It tends to cover the fundamentals: how pieces move, basic rules (castling, en passant, pawn promotion, check, checkmate), simple tactics, maybe some ideas about openings and basic strategy.

    What it does well:

    • Very clear, simple explanations. Good for people who don’t want any confusion about the foundations.
    • Probably more affordable and less intimidating than big thick chess theory tomes.

    Best for: someone brand new, maybe a child, someone whose first goal is understand how the game works rather than play tournaments.

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    How to Choose Which One for You

    Here are some tips, in the style of “what to look for in a set”, but for books:

    If you…You should probably pick…
    Are totally new, maybe a child, want something gentleHow to Play Chess for Beginners or Winning Chess Exercises for Kids
    Prefer learning by doing puzzles / exercisesWinning Chess Exercises for Kids, Bobby Fischer Teaches Chess
    Like explanations, want to understand strategy and not just tacticsHow to Win at Chess by Rozman, The Chess Blueprint
    Already know some basics and want to solidify up to ~1000-1200 EloHow to Win at Chess or The Chess Blueprint
    Want to avoid confusion, dense notation, too much theoryBobby Fischer Teaches Chess, How to Play Chess