chesster_sharon, you seem to have the ability to ask pertinent questions.
Annotation is supplying post-game insight into the text of the game. This can be heavy - in great detail with accompanying lines and variations or light with a few words or alternate moves sprinkled throughout.
In looking over your game I saw what looks to me like some missed opportunities on both sides, though I haven't tried to examine all the possibilites that stem from different lines of play. For example white played 9. Bxd7+. It seems to me 9. Nxe5 was indicated. 11. Nxe5 just fails after 11...Nxe5 wins a piece (12. Qe2 Qe6). 15. d4 could have been met with ...0-0-0, rather than by losing a center pawn. Better than 19.c3 seems to be 19. Be3, x-raying a7 and opening the file to introduce his Rook to your Queen. 21...h5 left me puzzled, a wasted move unless there was some reason I neglected to see.
I don't understand the trading of Queens. 38...Qf2+ looks possibly winning after 39. Kh3 Qf5+ 40. Kg2 e4. Or at the least, Black just seems better off than with the Queens gone.
Anyway, it was a good game- I hope one of the first of many.
I'm new to this site and this was one of my first games--a tremendous challenge. I would appreciate more advanced players critiquing this most intriguing game with my new friend, Foreman. Yes, I won...but barely. I'm also not sure how to annotate the game as the "Read This Before Posting" post asks us to do. If someone could explain that, I'd appreciate it.
What I'd love to find out from folks here is do you typically exchange a knight for a knight or a bishop for a bishop, etc.? I know it depends on the situation, but I'm surprised at how often my opponents are doing this.
In this particular game, I realize I got myself in trouble by 13. when I let my knight get pinned. As I review the game, I see that I should have castled earlier and that would have helped.
At 38...Rf2+ I was positioning my rook to start knocking off his pawns, knowing they'd be the greatest threat to my king once we exchanged queens. And my decision to initiate the queen for a queen was due to my not feeling I had a good position with my bishop having to guard my king. I just couldn't figure out a way to threaten him with the alignment of his pawns and where he had his king.
My decision to swap queens, however, was what turned the game to my advantage. I wonder, however, if things would have turned out differently if he had not chosen to exchange our remaining bishops and rooks. How did I win when we were down to only our kings and pawns even though he had a material advantage? My king was positioned so that I could thwart his attempt to promote either of his pawns...by just one square!
I thoroughly enjoyed this game, but realize I definitely have lots of room for improvement. So, please, let me know...what would you have done? Would you have taken his queen (which resulted in a queen for a queen), or moved it and used some other strategy? Thanks for any and all suggestions, critiques, etc.