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Samuel Reshevsky

By Stephen Gordon
406 pages
$65.00
McFarland


Reviewed by Jeremy Silman

 

During the last several years, almost all the top players of the past (poor Lasker seems to have been forgotten!) have been reborn in their own compendium of games. Soltis wrote an excellent book on Marshall that is filled with biographical material, 220 games, and stories (also by McFarland & Company, Inc.), Warren Goldman wrote a highly detailed tome (replete with games, photos, biographical material and just about everything else you could think of) on Carl Schlechter (Published by Caissa Editions), and Kurt Landsberger wrote a heavy-duty biography on William Steinitz (once again, we have McFarland & Company, Inc. to thank).

This time the legendary American Champion Samuel Reshevsky comes to life in a book subtitled: A Compendium of 1768 Games with Diagrams, Crosstables, Some Annotations, and Indexes.

I, for one, am quite happy that this book was written. Reshevsky has been largely ignored by chess biographers and this book fills a rather large void. Though this huge coffee table size book mainly consists of crosstables to all his tournaments and virtually every game (usually unannotated) the great man played, some biographical material is presented at the start of every new decade (a word to the publishers: the page numbers in the table of contents don't quite jive with the actual placing of the written material).

My favorite parts of the book focus around the annotated games. In the Kashdan-Reshevsky match, almost all the games are annotated by either Reshevsky, Kashdan or Alekhine. Other games are also given notes, but far too few to make me completely satisfied.

Overall, Samuel Reshevsky will be an excellent addition to any chess library. It is, without any doubt, the best book ever written on this important and overlooked subject.

 

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