Bobby Fischer Goes to War: How the Soviets Lost the Most Extraordinary Chess Match of All Time

Bobby Fischer Goes to War: How the Soviets Lost the Most Extraordinary Chess Match of All Time

In the summer of 1972, with a presidential crisis stirring in the United States and the cold war at a pivotal point, two men—the Soviet world chess champion Boris Spassky and his American challenger Bobby Fischer—met in the most notorious chess match of all time. Their showdown in Reykjavik, Iceland, held the world spellbound for two months with reports of psychological warfare, ultimatums, political intrigue, cliffhangers, and farce to rival a Marx Brothers film. Thirty years later, David Edmonds and John Eidinow, authors of the national bestseller Wittgenstein’s Poker, have set out to reexamine the story we recollect as the quintessential cold war clash between a lone American star and the Soviet chess machine—a machine that had delivered the world title to the Kremlin for decades. Drawing upon unpublished Soviet and U.S. records, the authors reconstruct the full and incredible saga, one far more poignant and layered than hitherto believed. Against the backdrop of super...
ISBN: 9780062039248
Year of publication: 2010
Number of pages: 361
Reading time: 6 h. 1 min.
Formats: FB2, EPUB, PDF
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