When
I first got this book to review, I was a bit surprised
by the subject. This quickly turned to excitement
when I began looking through it, and shortly thereafter
I called friends like John Watson, Jack Peters,
and John Donaldson and raved about it. These players,
not being as fascinated by the bizarre as I am,
didn't buy into my enthusiasm. However, after
Watson finally got the book and glanced through
many of its pages, he was converted and wrote
a very positive review.
I first read about the Turk when
I was thirteen years old. The Turk, a life size,
chess-playing machine built in 1770, not only
appeared to be extremely strong, but also moved
its own pieces (one hand moved the pieces, the
other held onto its extremely long pipe!). To
say the least, my imagination was captured! How
was this possible? How did a machine play chess,
move pieces, and defy countless "experts"
as to how and why it worked?
Small wonder that the Turk became
the rage of Europe! Kings, Queens, politicians,
the rich and famous, scientists, artists, writers
(Edgar Allan Poe was a huge fan of the Turk),
and chess fans everywhere clamored to see its
wonders and fall victim to its considerable skills.
The Turk, Chess Automaton
lays all these mysteries bare. It tells you what
prompted its creation, the effect it had on countless
multitudes, and who owned it as one generation
after another turned to dust. Deeply researched,
this book presents history, facts, schematics,
photos, articles (from the 1700's to more modern
times), and games played by the Turk (for example,
the Turk, as Black, crushed Napoleon in 24 moves).
Brilliantly put together by Mr. Levitt, this beautiful
book will fascinate chessplayers and non-chessplayers
alike and is well worth the $50.00 price tag.
YOU
CAN FIND THIS BOOK AT

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