Turnstile Press, 1951. — 192 p.
Tnrs is not meant to be a primer on Chess, nor a guide to acquaint the advanced player with the more subtle points of end-game technique or the merits and demerits of the Grunfeld Defence and the MtCutcheon Variation. It is rather an atternpt to convey something of the sheer beauty of Chess, its perfect harmonl, its inexhaustible wealth of ideas.