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4 References and links

There are very few English-language books for people learning shogi. The two I recommend are:

  1. Shogi for Beginners, 2nd. Edition, by John Fairbairn. This is a superb beginner’s book in every way, covering all phases of the game. It was out of print for a long time, but has now been reprinted and is available either from Kiseido (http://www.labnet.or.jp/~kiseido) or from George Hodges (see below).
  2. The Art of Shogi, by Tony Hoskings. This is one step up from the Fairbairn book. It covers a lot of ground, and is especially noteworthy for its detailed treatment of opening lines. You can order this book from Amazon.com’s UK branch (http://www.amazon.co.uk).

Another book you may find is Shogi: Japan’s Game of Strategy by Trevor Leggett. This book is very elementary and is somewhat outdated, having been published first in 1966. However, it does feature a paper shogi board and punch-out pieces, so if you want a really cheap shogi set you might pick this book up. It is still in print.

Two books that are no longer in print but are definitely worth getting if you find them are Guide to Shogi Openings and Better Moves for Better Shogi, both by Aono Teriuchi. They are published in a bilingual edition (English/Japanese) and are the only books on shogi in English written by a Japanese professional shogi player. John Fairbairn did the translation from Japanese to English.

Shogi sets are available from:

George F. Hodges
P.O. Box 77
Bromley, Kent
United Kingdom BR1 2WT

George also sells equipment for all the historical shogi variants (see Shogi variants) (except for Kyoku tai shogi) and also sells back issues of the magazine “Shogi” which he published for 70 issues in the late 70’s to late 80’s. This magazine is STRONGLY recommended; it contains more information about shogi in English than you will ever find anywhere else.

Here are some useful URLs:

Pieter Stouten’s shogi page: http://www.shogi.net

This is the main shogi-related site on the internet, with links to almost all the other sites.

Roger Hare’s shogi page: http://www.ed.ac.uk/~rjhare/shogi

This has lots of information, including full rules to most of the shogi variants.

Patrick Davin’s Shogi Nexus: http://www.vega.or.jp/~patrick/shogi/

There’s lots of cool stuff on this site; my favorite is the extensive collection of Tsume-shogi (mating) problems, both for beginners and more advanced players.

Steve Evans’ shogi page: http://www.netspace.net.au/~trout/index.html

Steve has written a program that plays almost all of the shogi variants, unfortunately it only runs on Windows :-(

Hans Bodlaender’s chess variant pages: http://www.cs.ruu.nl/~hansb/d.chessvar

This page has an almost unimaginable variety of rules for different chess variants, including many shogi variants (historical and non-historical).

Wikipedia’s shogi variant pages: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Shogi_variants

Those pages contain a large number of variant rules, both ancient and modern.


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