As an introduction to chess, as the title advertises, this is a good book. It walks you through what the pieces do, terms for basic tactics, and then wraps up with a couple example games. The first example game is one player dominating another, which allows for a show of how basic strategy and tactics excel over just being smart and understanding how the pieces work. And the second game is a little bit closer, giving a much better idea of how a game between two people familiar with chess but not necessarily students of the game can go. The second example game is kind of nice in that it's a good refresher if you've been away from the game for awhile and are more of a casual player, which suits me well just getting back into it now. However, most of the book is taken up by basic chess terms and how the pieces work, which is useful for new players, however they could get the same information in a much more concise and inexpensive manner by spending about 10 minutes to half-an-hour on Wikipedia, depending if the game is kind of new or altogether new to them. I think that even a beginning chess book should set out to give players a little more of a headstart than this book does.