FIGHTING THE FRENCH: A NEW CONCEPT by GM Denis Yevseev is not your normal book on the Tarrasch variation (3.Nd2). Consider that he often has White wait a long time to play the advance e5, if he plays it at all – even against 3…Nf6.
How many books on the French do you know of that spend almost 100 pages on positions that almost always arise from the Nimzo-Indian or the Panov-Botvinnik variation of the Caro-Kann? FIGHTING THE FRENCH: A NEW CONCEPT is one that does.
GM Yevseev advocates a new method of development to meet the French in which White plays 3.Nd2 and then deploys his pieces according to the scheme Ngf3, Bd3, c3, 0-0, against almost anything that Black may try. The play that arises tends to be of a more strategic nature with ideas and plans predominating over long forced analysis. This said the play, which often ends up in IQP positions, packs plenty of punch.
Consider the following miniature won by one of the pioneers of this system, GM James Plaskett, against one of the world’s best.
Following the Chess Stars system, the material is laid out in a very methodical fashion that facilitates learning. First an overview is offered (Quick Repertoire), then the material is carefully examined (Step by Step) and finally deeply annotated games with lots of prose commentary completes the presentation of the theory (Complete Games).
This is a good approach that works well for players of different levels. Less experienced players and new comers to the system will want to go to Quick Overview and the Complete Games sections first while experienced users may be inclined to head straight to Step by Step.
The system Ngf3, Bd3, c3, 0-0, leads to more open play than one normally associates with the Tarrasch French and those wishing to construct a cohesive opening repertoire for White based on 1.e4 will find that it meshes well with the Panov-Bovinnik Attack against the Caro-Kann and to a lesser extent 2.c3 versus the Sicilian (some of the IQP positions that occur after 2…d5 are common to both openings).
GM Yevseev has done an outstanding job with this original work.