How To Study Chess On Your Own Pdf- - Google -

| Topic | Book | Author | |-------|------|--------| | Tactics | Chess Strategy (1915) | Edward Lasker | | Strategy | The Game of Chess (1935 – check copyright) | Siegbert Tarrasch | | Endgames | Chess Endings (1941 – some editions free) | Reuben Fine | | Openings | Chess Openings: Theory and Practice (early ed.) | Various |

"chess study plan" filetype:pdf "chess workbook" intermediate filetype:pdf Many chess coaches and blogs (e.g., Chessable , The Chess Website , ChessDoctrine ) offer free printable PDF worksheets with puzzles and tracking logs. Create a simple log (PDF table) with weekly columns: How To Study Chess On Your Own Pdf- - Google

"chess tactics" filetype:pdf "how to study chess" site:archive.org "endgame manual" free PDF | Topic | Book | Author | |-------|------|--------|

For modern books, search Google for “sample PDF” or “preview” from publishers like Everyman Chess, Quality Chess, or New In Chess. Many offer free first chapters. Do 20–30 puzzles daily. Use the “woodpecker method”: repeat the same set of puzzles until you solve them instantly. Free PDFs like “1001 Chess Exercises for Beginners” (samples online) or “Winning Chess Tactics” (public domain equivalents) are excellent. Step 5: Endgame Study Focus on king and pawn vs. king, rook and king vs. king, and basic minor piece mates. A free PDF resource is “Fundamental Chess Endings” (Müller & Lamprecht – older edition PDFs sometimes available legally via university chess clubs). Alternatively, “Chess Endgame Lessons” by Benko (free excerpts). Step 6: Strategy and Positional Play Study games of classical players (Capablanca, Alekhine, Rubinstein). Search Google for: Do 20–30 puzzles daily