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Alexander Alekhine (1892–1946)

Author of My Best Games of Chess 1908-1937

62 Works 1,040 Members 14 Reviews 2 Favorited

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Works by Alexander Alekhine

International Chess Tournament 1924: New York (1924) 132 copies, 4 reviews
My Best Games of Chess 1908-1923 (1939) 94 copies, 1 review
My Best Games of Chess, 1924-1937 (1970) 93 copies, 1 review
107 Great Chess Battles, 1939-1945 (1980) 78 copies, 1 review
New York 1927 (1900) 72 copies
100 Instructive Games of Alekhine (1949) 49 copies, 2 reviews
World Chess Championship 1937 (1973) 27 copies, 1 review
Hastings 1936 (1992) 7 copies
Chess Duels, 1893-1920 (2017) 6 copies
Aljechin-Euwe 1935 (1983) 6 copies
San Remo 1930 (1973) 5 copies
Gran ajedrez (1986) 5 copies
Alekhine nazi articles (2002) 3 copies
Gli scacchi ipermoderni (2000) 2 copies

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Reviews

15 reviews
Lilienthal died the other day and I noticed in an obituary this story:

Lilienthal could also boast three blitz game victories against the chess genius Alexander Alekhine, though these, played at the rate of five minutes per player per game, did not count for official tournament records. After his defeats in these quickplay contests, Alekhine, invariably generous to promising young chess talents, personally funded Lilienthal’s entry to an important blitz tournament for which the young
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Hungarian could not afford the entry fee. Lilienthal went on to reward his benefactor’s munificence by duly winning the first prize in the blitz tournament. When Lilienthal, now flush with cash after his victory, offered to refund the world champion’s subsidy, Alekhine declined the offer, insisting that his reward would be for Lilienthal to go on to become a master of the game that Alekhine loved and to which he had committed his own life.

This is Alekhine, the supposed Nazi sympathiser, an account of which you can find here: http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/alekhine.html

Does this story go any way to offset his Nazi sympathies, if they've been proven? I wonder if I may make a case for the question being irrelevant?

What I really think is that Alekhine was a chess player and this meant he didn’t have a clue about the world we think of as real. If you play chess like Alekhine, the real world is the chess board. Maybe this story goes some way to explaining:

"'In 1935, an international team tournament was held in Warsaw. Alekhine played top board for France, of which he was a naturalized citizen. However, on this trip he arrived at the Polish border without a passport. When the officials asked him for his papers he replied: "I am Alekhine, chess champion of the world. I have a cat called Chess. I do not need papers.' The matter had to be cleared up by the highest authorities." Reuben Fine. The Psychology of the Chess Player.

Is this relevant as a defence? Maybe, maybe not. Another example is the 5 queen game, where again, Alekhine’s conception of reality has nothing to do with normal people’s. The story in detail can be found here: http://www.xs4all.nl/~timkr/chess/al5q.htm

Coming back to the first story, here he is, Alekhine, reaching into his pocket to help a destitute young chess player. Are we, then, able to forgive some special people for living in another world while being forced to inhabit our own. I sort of hope so.
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While it does lack some of the photos and historical (though not fundamentally chessical) data of earlier editions, it's been completely reformatted (so that the analysis now follows the moves as opposed to the games), rendered into figurine algebraic notation, fleshed out with additional diagrams, and suffered some typographical corrections, all of which have served to transmogrify one of the all time great tournament books into a much more readily readable tome. Thanks, Russell Enterprises!
Dover Edition; the official tournament book of one of the most famous chess tournaments of all time. This edition uses English notation, and includes Alekhine's round by round updates on the tournament. One of the strongest tournaments in history, with three World Champions and three challengers for the title.

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Associated Authors

J. Du Mont Translator
Igor Zaitsev Preface
Andrew Soltis Foreword
Rainer Albrecht Translator
Robert Persons Cover designer
Sam Sloan Introduction
Jerry Hanken Introduction
M. E. Goldstein Translator

Statistics

Works
62
Members
1,040
Popularity
#24,754
Rating
4.2
Reviews
14
ISBNs
78
Languages
5
Favorited
2

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