This book has got to be on the list of my all time favorites. Although I read this book over 20 years ago I still keep it on my shelf and periodically I read it. It is a great story about good verses evil and how one can't survive without the other. Wonderful masterpiece!!
Summery courtesy of goodreads.com Otto Penzler and the Mystery Writers of America present Grandmaster by Warren Murphy and Molly Cochran, winner of the Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Paperback Original in 1985.
Two men, born on the same day on opposite sides of the world, driven to oppose each other--for only one man may be the Grandmaster. Justin Gilead and Alexander Zharkov, two men driven by powerful forces they can neither understand nor deny--driven to fight each other in a battle for power that only one of them may win.
Gilead, a magnificent athlete, an American, a genius, and a spy. Zharkov, a master strategist, head of the feared secret service agency, Nichevo, a determined, ambitious man.
They first meet as ten-year-old chess prodigies-both lonely, both meaning to win, both born under the magical sign of the gold coiled serpent. They will come to know the uses of pleasure, the secrets of pain, the impact of evil turned upon itself.
They will understand the deadly forces that grip the world in swift violence, sudden death. And they will finally know that only one man may be the Grandmaster.
Grandmaster is an extraordinary tale of spymasters and assassins, murder and intrigue played against a background of Far Eastern mysticism from Moscow to Washington, from Havana to Tibet.
Review
When I first read the blurb for this book, I got really excited as it reminded me of a book I read more than twenty years ago. Imagine my surprise when I started reading to discover that its the same book re-released.
Anyway rereading Grandmaster reminded me of all the reasons I loved it, intrigue, adventure and a life and death battle where good battles evil.
Justin Gilead, Alexander Zharkov. Born enemies til death, meet as child prodigies in a chess tournament. Then again as adults. One is a man who was raised by monks. One was raised to take over the Russian military group known as Nichevo. This book is amazing, I could not put it down.
1st read 35 years ago, and reread several times. 1st book I added, as a new member. Excellent read. You may not even put it down until you are finished. Not a spoiler, but JUST IN CASE you might think so. There is a part 2: High Priest.Most great reads have more.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This book is precisely what "How I became a famous novelist" is all about. What began as an interesting theme, soon turned into a mystical crackpot of extremely cheesy narration of the life of a protagonist, who undergoes hardships that no one has ever heard of.
Pretentious, cheesy, predictable and for creating a complete lack of any satisfaction for the reader in me, except for a very fine quote:-
"What accounts for the bravery of weak men at the moment if death?"
I picked this up probably hoping for something as ingenious as 'Remo Williams: the Destroyer' but was disappointed. Although I respect the reputation Murphy has in men's action literature (and the 'Remo' character is a gem) this aborted series was just really too lurid. Turgid reading. Too many coincidences, too much over-juxtapositioning of the two character's life-stories. It was a muscular, throaty read; lots of ka-pow! biff! sock! punch! but just not enough restraint.
When I first starting reading this book, I was thinking it was another cold war chess match spy story. Was I wrong! What a compelling story of good vs evil, white vs black, yin and yang. I really enjoyed the development of Justin Gilead, the good guy and the battle he goes through to avenge the death of his mentor and the other monks who raised him. The cat and mouse game with Russian Alexander Zharkov keeps the story moving along.
This was one of the best books I can remember I've read it when I was a child and was really caught up in this book, I can only recommend this to read who likes books about Spies, Chess and the ColdWar times.
A very good book. I loved how the Grandmaster trained by picking up a piece of paper, crumbling it in his hand and then smoothing it out on the floor for several years.
Read this and Grandmaster a couple times in the last decades. It's escapist, surely, and I remember enjoying it or I wouldn't have saved it for rainy days. Exactly what I require.