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Inspired by both Daniel Defoe's 'A Journal of the Plague Year'
(1722) and 'The King', an anthology of the witty and provocative
chess columns of the Dutch Grandmaster, Jan Hein Donner, Ray Keene
here collects his thoughts and writings on the year 2020 - both in
chess and the wider world. His reflections include the impact of
Covid-19 on the popularity of chess, the remarkable influence of
the Netflix series 'The Queen's Gambit', the growing army of
teenage Grandmasters, the online pivot of chess competition and the
emergence of chess entrepreneurs, such as World Champion Magnus
Carlsen and Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura.. Like Donner, Ray uses
chess as a metaphor for observations on art, culture and
civilisation.
This match between the number one and number two ranked players in
the world is one of the most eagerly-awaited World Championship
clashes of recent years. Defending champion Magnus Carlsen first
gained the title in 2013 when he beat Viswanathan Anand. He has
already successfully defended his title twice, against Anand in
2014 and against Sergey Karjakin in 2016. Carlsen has been the
highest ranked player in the world since July 2011. ***** His
challenger, Fabiano Caruana, has been playing brilliantly in the
run-up to the championship, registering numerous tournament
victories against elite competition. He gained the right to
challenge Carlsen thanks to a superb victory in the Berlin
Candidates event early in 2018 where he scored 9/14, finishing a
point clear of the best players in the world. Prior to the match he
has drawn to within three points of the champion on the current
ratings (Carlsen is 2835, Caruana 2832). Caruana is the first
American since the legendary Bobby Fischer to play a match for the
supreme title. ----- * All match games analysed in great detail.
--- * Portraits of the protagonists with key games and moments from
their careers. --- * History of the World Chess Championship.
"In the dimension of reviving the mystique and wonder of chess, it
is all too easy for those engaged in the rough and tumble of chess
combat to overlook the mystery and infinite aesthetic profundity of
its intellectual and iconic ethos. One example stands out... Barry
has encountered many of the greats in person and across the board.
Barry's insights into the relationship between Staunton pattern
pieces, pawns and Masonic Symbology are worthy of a new Dan Brown
novel. So, in this book, prepare to follow a Tour d'Horizon, a
veritable Smorgasbord of chess information, artistic connections
and inspirations combined with a mentally stimulating journey
throughout the diverse ramifications of chess, art, culture and its
place in the canon of civilised virtue." Raymond Keene OBE,
International Chess Grandmaster, Chess Correspondent of The Times
Leonid Stein's brilliant chess career, cut tragically short in
1973, included overwhelming victories against the world's leading
grandmasters, Stein not only stormed to an incredible total of 3
first prizes (out of 4 attempts) in the USSR Championships, but
also won what were arguably the two strongest tournaments of all
time, (Moscow 1967 and Moscow 1971)
Ray Keene selects and annotates his most interesting games against
such giants as Anatoly Karpov, Mikhail Botvinik, Mikhail Tal, Jan
Timman, John Nunn, Tony Miles and Svetozar Gligoric. Originally
published as a private limited edition.
A new edition of Ray Keene and Barry Martin's lucid presentation of
how to start on the stimulating path of playing chess. It features:
a clear explanation of the legal moves for each piece; a
straightforward guide to special rules, such as castling and en
passant; and a discussion of how to begin - basic openings - and
how to finish - endgames. There is also an updated gallery of chess
'heroes' past and present, a section on the Golden Rules of chess
mastery, and - to reinforce the important ideas - a selection of
puzzles (with solutions) to test progress and understanding.
Inspired by both Daniel Defoe's 'A Journal of the Plague Year'
(1722) and 'The King', an anthology of the witty and provocative
chess columns of the Dutch Grandmaster, Jan Hein Donner, Ray Keene
here collects his thoughts and writings on the year 2020 - both in
chess and the wider world. His reflections include the impact of
Covid-19 on the popularity of chess, the remarkable influence of
the Netflix series 'The Queen's Gambit', the growing army of
teenage Grandmasters, the online pivot of chess competition and the
emergence of chess entrepreneurs, such as World Champion Magnus
Carlsen and Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura.. Like Donner, Ray uses
chess as a metaphor for observations on art, culture and
civilisation.
Tony Buzan achieved global fame as the inventor of Mind Mapping, a
technique for note taking and creative ideas which has transformed
educational theory and practice around the world. In the course of
his career, promoting Mental Literacy and the belief that Genius is
present in every one of us, Tony has encountered numerous giant
personalities. These include the eccentric singer and superstar
Michael Jackson, whose children were taught by Tony; quintuple
Olympic Gold winner Sir Steve Redgrave; ABBA member Benny Andersson
and Poet Laureate Ted Hughes, whom Tony commissioned to write a
Memory Poem with a difference. It is published here for the very
first time. Other luminaries encountered in these pages include
Frieda Hughes, daughter of Ted Hughes and the ethereal poetess
Sylvia Plath, UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Dr Henry
Kissinger, Edward de Bono and Bill Gates. Tony Buzan’s teachings
also embrace Speed Reading, Memory, Physical Fitness, Martial Arts,
IQ, Concentration and Creativity, all embodied in his foundation of
THE RENAISSANCE ACADEMY for business, future leaders and pioneers
of the use of Brainpower. This volume recounts his battles to
establish the validity of his methods, and explains the key
elements, which can be utilised by all those who wish to improve
their powers of Mental Literacy in general. The techniques
explained here will help everyone, from school and college
exam-taking, to those determined to keep their brain fit and
functioning maximally into advanced age.
Website of Raymond Keen: http: //raymondkeen.com/ E-mail address of
Raymond Keen: [email protected] As the reader moves through my
volume of poetry, Love Poems for Cannibals, he/she will find poems
of war (in this case Vietnam), poems dealing with current spiritual
issues (Christianity, Buddhism, spiritual doubt and the
soaring-singing human spirit), dysfunctional family relationships
and feelings, portraits of great figures in contemporary human
history presented with candor and wit, poems that rage against the
omnipresence of human hypocrisy and poems that present
American/Western civilization under the glaring light of truth -
with the single redemptive quality that this truth sings in these
poems. A volume of contemporary poetry, Love Poems for Cannibals
expresses the thoughts, feelings, quandaries and wonder of an
American poet very much alive to the darkness and light of the 21st
century. Poet Raymond Keen writes, "I was born and raised in
Pueblo, Colorado. Back in my childhood of the 40's and my
adolescence during the 50's, I believed in human greatness and
human virtue. I had respect for authority, and believed that life
was fundamentally fair and could be understood as a rational
narrative. I believed that a human being could, through words, come
close to expressing the truth, even if only a momentary fragment of
this truth. I now realize that I may have been overly optimistic.
Human verbal communication characteristically obscures the truth,
as it covers the truth with the repetitive cliche. My poetry
attempts to make that insight present, palpable, and undeniable.
Although I sometimes may succeed in getting through or beyond the
cliche, I make no claims on truth." In Love Poems for Cannibals,
truth and beauty, body and spirit, mind and matter, pain and
pleasure admix in the following eight sections: The Vietnam War is
not dinky dau. (1967-1968) Est Deus in Nobis. (1969-2012) Mother Is
On Vacation. (1974-2004) mouth-honour (1973-2003) Is There Mucus in
Paradise? (1973-2010) Homo Homini Lupus Est. (1976-2009) Final
Entropy (1974-2012) Prose Coda (2001-2012) Making reference to
current cultural, political and social events, Raymond Keen's poems
can be darkly provocative, bitingly witty and serenely
contemplative. Raymond writes, "I want readers to be stirred with
questions about what it means to be a human being. I don't provide
answers, but I try to make clear what the stakes are. The stakes
for human beings in the 21st century are very high." Powerful,
memorable, wise, and at times infuriating, his collection of poetry
is the result of an accumulation of language gems and
cultural/literary insights acquired over many years, which shed
light on the time in which we are now living.
Richard Reti (1889-1929) was both a master player and a superb
endgame composer. He was also a prominent member of the
hyper-modern school and author of two of the greatest chess books
ever written, Masters of the Chessboard and Modern Ideas in Chess.
His games, which greatly influenced chess strat egy, are known for
their many innovations, beautifully developed combinations, and
important advances in opening play and strategy. There are 70 games
in this book, selected from all stages of Reti's career. Early
games show the budding of Reti's almost phenomenal positional
skills and his rise to status of great master with first prize wins
at Kaschau and the international tournament of Gothenburg, 1920.
There are many games from the tournaments of 1922, during the
development of the Reti and the English openings including
Reti-Rubinstein 1923, Reti-Becker 1923, Reti - Bogolyubov 1924, and
his stunning defeat of Capablanca in 1924. The games from 1925 to
his premature death in 1929 show his further development and number
among them many which made the chess world sit up and take notice.
Fifteen of Reti's most interesting composed endgames are also
included. There is a short memoir and expert annotation by Harry
Golombek. For this edition Raymond Keene has written a new
Introduction.
The 1978 world chess championship in the Philippines was the most
riotous of modern times. Pitting the soviet defector Korchnoi
against the golden boy of the soviet establishment - Karpov - the
players were not just content to hammer each other over the chess
board; they also enlisted such weird assistants as the
parapsychologist Dr Vladimir Zukhar and orange-robed gurus from the
Ananda Marga sect. The dramatis personae were completed by
President Marcos, his shoe-collecting First Lady Imelda and a
gaggle of shady characters from the KGB. Grandmaster Ray Keene was
Korchnoi's chief second during this wild chess extravaganza and
this book tells the inside story of one of the most exotic chess
competitions ever staged.
Compiled by three grandmasters and two international masters this
scholarly treatise explains in depth the thinking behind a defence
that has been a favourite of champions such as Capablanca,
Botvinnik, Petrosian and Karpov. Even Kasparov has been known to
use the Caro Kann on occasion, for example in one case to defeat
Mikhail Tal.
A companion volume to Winning with the Nimzo, this book is the
first part of a full explanation of one of the most important
defences to the Queen's pawn in contemporary chess. It has been a
favourite of Fischer, Kasparov, Karpov, Petrosian and Botvinnik, to
name but a few of the greats who have employed it. This book -
unlike many rivals - concentrates on full games with notes
explaining strategies that will never go out of fashion.
Moscow, in the autumn of 1984, was the setting for a clash between
two of the all-time greats of chess: defending champion Anatoly
Karpov, the most deadly tournament player in the history of the
game, and Gary Kasparov, the 21 year old from Baku who would become
the youngest ever World Champion were he to overthrow his rival.
This gruelling test of contrasting character, style and sheer
physical reserves roused a wave of media interest and thrust chess
into the forefront of public attention.
The Nimsowitsch/Larsen attack ( 1 b3) is one of the most
interesting and most flexible opening systems in which the theory
has not yet fully crystallised. It is, therefore, an ideal choice
for the player wishing to avoid sharp theoretical duels in the
opening and preferring to throw his opponent on his own resources
at an early stage.
The history of the World Chess Championship continues in this
volume with the epic struggles between Botvinnik, Bronstein,
Smyslov, Tal and Petrosian, via the brief but spectacular advent of
Bobby Fischer, and on to the modern superstars Karpov and Kasparov.
All games from the matches are annotated and this book with its
companion volume, World Chess Championship: Steinitz to Alekhine,
forms a valuable addition to the library of any chess enthusiast
who wishes to possess a complete collection of games played at the
very highest level.
In 1981 - World Champion now for 6 years - Anatoly Karpov had
reached the height of his powers. He was a master of sharp modern
opening systems, thought swiftly and acted decisively. His play was
virtually error free. Facing this juggernaut the veteran Viktor
Korchnoi pulled out the final stops for his ultimate chess
challenge to become champion. In vain. Karpov brushed aside his
efforts to secure one of the easiest victories ever achieved at
chess summit level. As in 1978 Korchnoi produced his orange robed
Ananda Marga gurus to help him chant for victory - but in the sober
atmosphere of the Italo-german mountains-rather than the exotic and
heady surroundings of the far eastern Philippines-the antics of
Korchnoi's suppporters had little effect. Karpov emerged as a
seemingly unbeatable colossus. Now guaranteed a reign of at least 9
years Karpov had already exceeded the championship performance of
Capablanca and was threatening to surpass the exploits of such
mighty champions as Steinitz, Lasker, Alekhine and Botvinnik.
The King's Indian is noted as a dynamic counter-attacking defence
par excellence. This book describes the key strategies for both
sides in the main lines such as the Fianchetto variation, the
Petrosian system, the Sdmisch/ Four Pawns attack and Averbakh.
Analysis is backed up with verbal explanation making this book an
ideal introduction for those wishing to take up or face the King's
Indian in competitive situations.
A companion volume to Two Opening Repertoires for White: Volume 1,
this book details some more aggressive strategies in the opening
for White again based on the key move 1d4! Together the two volumes
give ambitious White players a complete arsenal of choice against
all Black defences. The companion volume is Two Opening Repertoires
for White: Volume 1: Keeping control with White
In early 1985 Florencio Campomanes - the now disgraced former
president of FIDE, the World Chess Federation - halted the World
Title challenge from Garry Kasparov "without result," thus forcing
a rematch in the autumn of that same year. This book recounts
Kasparov's determined fresh assault on the world title which made
him at age 22 the youngest champion in the history of the game.
This book recounts the fourth and penultimate chapter in the
half-decade long rivalry which erupted between Garry Kasparov and
Anatoly Karpov. In the eyes of many this conflict symbolised the
clash between the Brezhnev-inspired forces of reaction in the old
USSR and the new Gorbachev/Yeltsin-driven imperatives which
ultimately led to the collapse of the creaking Soviet empire.
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