“An evil man who is not going to be missed. Thoroughly corrupt persecutor of those who wanted chess to move forward. Destroyer of our beloved World Championship. Some champagne with dinner tonight to wish him good riddance!” Eric Schiller’s moving eulogy to the former FIDE…
Read MoreMore Articles
I actually paid good money for No.9
Publication of the British magazine Kingpin is always an eagerly-awaited event
sharper than a bone-saw!
It seems to me that you haven’t quite achieved the manic, off-the-wall style of humour that Informator manages so well, but you run them a pretty good second
the magazine I most enjoy . . . Gary Lane’s agony column is a must for all chess addicts
combines an amusing style with solid instruction
A great English chess favourite
In the chess satire stakes @KingpinEd are masters of the art form … a veritable feast: irony, sarcasm, hyperbole
Kingpin is not a chess magazine in the normal sense of the word
Its rather coarse satirical manner may not appeal to everyone – just the majority of us who enjoy sharp games and low humour
Lev Khariton The attractive countryside of Meudon is a 15-minute train ride from Paris. Here I came to interview Boris Spassky just three days before his 60th birthday. He reminiscences about his life, his chess career, his rivals and friends. Dear Grandmaster, I should…
Andy Lewis A common Arimaa starting position Anyone for a variation on chess? Is chess played out? This concern has been voiced periodically over the history of the game, and the challenges has never been more profound: over-refinement of opening-theory; perfection of endgame technique;…
Sarah Hurst was a regular contributor to CHESS magazine in the 1990s and also edited the British Chess Federation’s newsletter, ChessMoves. Her fine book Curse of Kirsan: Adventures in the Chess Underworld is now available on Kindle at a bargain price. Since 2002 she has been translating…
“a must-read for everyone who doesn’t take chess too seriously; it’s especially a must-read for everyone who does take chess seriously!” ChessVibes “. . . very, very entertaining . . . some of the back issues were classics and I have some of them at home ….
Boy George
© Thomas family collection This is the earliest known photograph of George Thomas (later Sir George). It was taken in Southsea in September 1895 when George was 14 years old. A few weeks earlier he had been a spectator at the great Hastings tournament where…
The Mystery of the Chilled Chess Champ
Ron Katz* The Carlsen/Niemann/Chess.com dust-up has recently been resolved, but not explained. This fictional explanation fills that gap… “According to this article,” Barb Silver said to her husband, Bernie, “Baby Boomers like us are responsible for inflation.” She was peering over the newspaper she held,…
It’s Really Him
Nearly fifty years ago CHESS published this irate letter: CHESS (October 1973) It provoked a lively response: CHESS (November 1973) One reader sprang to Mr Lorley’s defence with knowing verve: CHESS (December 1973) Having made his point, Mr Lorley kept a dignified silence. No…
Steinitz the Great and Grumpy
Adrian Harvey Steinitz in London A Chess Biography with 623 Games Tim Harding 421 pages | 84 photos | hardback | $75.00 Jefferson: McFarland, 2020 For three reasons this reviewer regards Steinitz as the greatest chess player of all time. In the first…
- 10 Seconds with 7
- About Us 1
- Archive 227
- Articles 99
- Back issues 48
- Cheating 28
- Creative chess 96
- Features 224
- FIDE 51
- Front Page 119
- Games 90
- Hack Attack 54
- History scrapbook 141
- Homepage 114
- Interviews 41
- Kirsan 43
- Letters 10
- Nosher 11
- Private Eye 4
- Quotes 131
- Reviews 92
- Shop 30
- The Penguin Files 38
- The Poisoned Pawn 6
- Uncategorized 10
Gary Kenworthy
→ Commenting on: Tim Krabbé: 20 Questions
Jon Manley
→ Commenting on: No Regrets: Boris Spassky at 60
IchessU
→ Commenting on: No Regrets: Boris Spassky at 60
S.B. Cohen
→ Commenting on: Chess and Sex – The Survey