Atlantic books, hardcover mit Schutzumschlag, Splendid bound edition,
Englisch, ISBN: 978-1-843-54609-2, 384 Seiten, 2007.
White King and Red Queen
is the story of twentieth-century chess, and its
inexorable connection to the rise and fall of Soviet Communism. Daniel Johnsons
landmark book begins with the early days of revolutionary activity in central
Europe, when the chessboard was the province of exiled intellectuals and games
were confined to coffee houses. When the Bolsheviks moved into the Kremlin after
the 1917 revolution, they took chess with them. Although Lenin himself was a
keen player, it was Nikolai Krylenko, creator of the Red Army, who persuaded the
Kremlin to adopt chess as a symbol of Soviet power. From then on, competitors
were obliged to play for the state, or risk imprisonment and exile.
Throughout the Cold War, the Communist influence on international politics
was reflected in Soviet domination of world chess. From 1945, champions sprang
unfailingly from Soviet soil. Three decades of Soviet chess hegemony were
shattered finally in 1972 with the historic match between Bobby Fischer and
Boris Spassky. The years between 1974 and 1981 saw the equally thrilling
struggle between Viktor Korchnoi, anti-Communist dissident, and Anatoly Karpov,
loyal representative of the Kremlin.
White King and Red Queen
ecounts in gripping detail the history of the
game and its players during the twentieth century, and culminates with the
emergence of Garry Kasparov, the last Soviet world champion. Daniel Johnson - a
chess player, Cold War correspondent and historian - is the perfect guide to
this remarkable period, when chess matches, for a brief, golden time, were
front-page news, and captured the worlds imagination.