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224 pages, Audiobook
Published November 13, 2018
2.5 out of 5 stars
As with any nonfiction book, I award points if I learned something, and I certainly learned a few things from this book (mostly unverified anecdotes about chess history, for which no citations or sources were provided). I also gave a point or two for the author’s expert descriptions of the scene of the 2016 World Chess Championship — and of the players (their body language, expressions, and so on). For those parts and others, it was easy to imagine oneself on the scene.
But, wow, was this author all over the place. The first really startling moment was on page 6 when he suddenly interrupts his introduction of the Big Match to wonder “What the hell was I doing there?” So the author takes us on a journey through his *own* history with chess and a drunk Hungarian uncle and rooftop chess games in Cuba, and... A bunch of stuff not related at all to the 2016 tournament. (There are also chapters on Judit Polgar’s background, why Josh Waitzkin quit chess, and how Pete Winston disappeared — again, none of them related in any way to the topic at hand.)
And of course the subtitle is a poor attempt to link the match to the former president’s campaign slogan — the title is just as meaningless as the slogan. Chess hadn’t become somehow ungreat before this, nor did this match change chess in any fundamental way.