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The year 2004 will be remembered as a golden
time for chess biographies. First out was the
massive book by Jeremy Silman on Pal Benko for
Siles Press and now McFarland & Company,
Inc., has published two tremendous works on Amos
Burn by Richard Forster and Reuben Fine by Aidan
Woodger. The appearance of one of these books
would have been cause enough for celebration,
but to have all three show up in less than six
months is pretty amazing. This review will cover
one of the greatest American Grandmasters.
Ask a U.S. player to rattle off a list of his
countryman who reached the level of World Championship
contender before the age of 25 and the names
of Paul Morphy, Bobby Fischer and Gata Kamsky
are sure to be mentioned. An impressive list
of players no doubt, but not a complete one.
Add Reuben Fine, who tied for first at AVRO 1938
at the age of 24, and you have things right.
It's truly impressive how much Fine accomplished
in a professional playing career that for all
intents and purposes lasted less than a decade.
Aidan Woodger's splendid new biography adds
tremendously to our knowledge of a player who
was a prolific writer (Basic Chess Endings, The
Ideas Behind the Chess Openings, Chess
the Easy Way, The Middle Game in Chess,
etc.) but produced only a small book – Lessons
from My Games: A Passion for Chess – about
his own career. Fine's autobiography, which came
out in 1958, contained 45 of his match and tournament
games while ChessBase: Mega 2004 has not many
more than 300 including blitz and simul games.
Woodger has amassed 882! Most of the games are
annotated, many in depth. The list isn't complete,
you won't find Fine's missing games with Reshevsky
and J. Bernstein from Pasadena 1932 or those
from the mysterious match with Arnold Denker
in 1934, but there is plenty of incredible stuff.
I wonder how many chess players in Utah know
that Fine won their state championship in 1940
and that all of his games have been preserved!
Woodger answered a question I had been trying
to solve for some time. Researching the Mechanics'
Institute Chess Club of San Francisco's history,
I couldn't pinpoint when Reuben Fine was in San
Francisco. The chess column in the San Francisco
Chronicle had stopped in the early 1930s
and the California Chess Reporter didn't start
until the early 1950's so they were no help.
I knew Fine was in Los Angeles in 1940 and 1945,
but exactly when had he ventured North? The answer
can be found on page 318 which lists Fine's cross-country
tour in 1940 that brought him to California in
September. The exact date of the exhibition isn't
available, but his result of +18, -0, =1
is.
The author acknowledges that more material on
Fine is still to be found and hopes to add to
this work in a future edition. Writing this book
from England Woodger may not have had access
to some of the more obscure U.S. state publications
of the early 1930s like the short lived Texas
Chess Knights and The Chess Reporter from
Beverly Hills, but he did have helpers like Peter
Lahde who found hard to find material in the
pages of the Los Angeles Times. One great
find was the Hollywood four-cornered tournament
of 1940 where Fine bested Borochow, Woliston
and Steiner.
Like all McFarland & Company, Inc. books
this work on Reuben Fine is handsomely produced
and designed to last forever. The layout of the
8 1/2 X 11 book is very easy on the eye while
offering the reader pages filled with content.
Highly Recommended. |