I’ll be reading your stuff with interest as you zeroed in on the only three sources for thinking about *how* to study chess, and this is after years of gravitating to such books. Also, I like your other posts. Welcome to Substack!
Thank you flakefly, and welcome to Substack as well! I think Kuljasevic's book was brilliant in filling a much needed gap in the market, and perhaps there could be a similar one geared towards less experienced players. I've read pretty much all of Studer & ChessMood's blog posts, great sources of wisdom and inspiration.
I've studying using Studer's Next Level Training plan, and liking it a lot. No one covers *how* to study chess like he does. Kuljasevic is a great book, but is more useful I think for higher rated players, and covers a broader range of needs. Still, I refer to it again and again, which is always a mark of a good chess book!
I’ll be reading your stuff with interest as you zeroed in on the only three sources for thinking about *how* to study chess, and this is after years of gravitating to such books. Also, I like your other posts. Welcome to Substack!
Thank you flakefly, and welcome to Substack as well! I think Kuljasevic's book was brilliant in filling a much needed gap in the market, and perhaps there could be a similar one geared towards less experienced players. I've read pretty much all of Studer & ChessMood's blog posts, great sources of wisdom and inspiration.
I've studying using Studer's Next Level Training plan, and liking it a lot. No one covers *how* to study chess like he does. Kuljasevic is a great book, but is more useful I think for higher rated players, and covers a broader range of needs. Still, I refer to it again and again, which is always a mark of a good chess book!