A transposition in chess is a little like a bait-and-switch marketing
ploy. The customer thinks he's getting a bargain on one piece of
merchandise, but he ends up buying another at a much higher price. In
the first book devoted to chess transpositions, New York Post
columnist and acclaimed chess author Andy Soltis shows how this strategy
works over the board. By transposing a series of well-known moves (i.e.,
making them in an unfamiliar order), a player leads his opponent into an
unfavorable position that he would normally have shunned. Using
entertaining examples from the games of the masters, Soltis covers a
variety of transpositions in virtually every kind of opening: double
e-pawn, Sicilian, the Reti, English, Indian, and others.