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In
a way, this review is about several things: ego,
creativity, energy, passion, self-preservation,
and whatever else I can drag up from the subject
matter at hand. Let’s start with my first
salvo. The subject: chessbooks/chesswriters in
general.
There are quite a few solid chess writers nowadays.
Most of them start out with high ideals, realize
that they are getting paid peanuts, and begin
to crank out 5 or 6 “packets of blither”
a year, rightfully hoping that more books means
more cash. Some of these grandmasters miraculously
manage to keep a fairly high level of material
coming, though originality and thoughtfulness
is certainly going to be sacrificed on the alter
of financial practicality.
I find it odd, then, that chess reviewers have
somehow been sold on the idea that a good book
is one that doesn’t ruffle anyone’s
feathers. In fact, to many reviewers a book that
presents things in a clear but dull manner is
now the standard by which all things are judged
(“boring” being much preferable to
“entertaining but cryptic”).
Now we come to a young grandmaster named Jonathan
Rowson. His first book, UNDERSTANDING THE GRUNFELD,
was informative, energetic, humorous, and most
amazingly, fun! He did things I’d never
seen in an opening book before, and I was instantly
a fan.
His second book, THE SEVEN DEADLY CHESS SINS,
covered a subject that hasn’t been explored
nearly enough: chess psychology. One of the first
books on that subject is by Reuben Fine, and its
pompous, insane tone and message left me laughing
for hours when I first read it as a lad. When
an author keeps telling you that a love of chess
means that you want to have sex with your mother
and you have an uncontrollable desire to murder
your father, you just have to melt into a state
of jovial hysteria (on the other hand, some readers
of that book must have asked, “How could
he have known?”).
Other books eventually followed: CHESS PSYCHOLOGY
by Krogius (I felt like I was reading the words
of an emotionless robot), THE PSYCHOLOGY OF CHESS
SKILL by Dennis Holding (It should be renamed:
The Psychology of Dull Writing), and finally,
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF CHESS by Hartston and Wason,
CHESS THE MECHANICS OF THE MIND by Pfleger and
Treppner (these last two are quite interesting,
but neither gets the blood boiling), and WINNING
WITH CHESS PSYCHOLOGY by Benko and Hochberg (less
serious but more fun than the others).
What Rowson dared to do in his chess psychology
book was to let it all hang out. He raved, he
brought up a host of subjects that, at times,
had nothing to do with one another, he shared
his interests, shared his personality, shared
his youthful innocence, and shared his obvious
desire to learn and understand. At the same time,
often hidden in strange waterways, main text,
and sidebars, he forced his readers to think,
to laugh, to scratch their heads, and to understand
their own neurological meanderings.
Rowson, in comparison with the hundreds of generic,
smooth, antiseptic wastes of paper that so many
people (including myself--after all, there ARE
good wastes of paper and bad wastes of paper!)
praise, DARED to inject heart, IDEAS, originality,
introspection, thought, and (this is a shock)
EFFORT into his writing. Could he have tightened
things up? No doubt about it. Could he have edited
out many pages of material that served more to
confuse than to teach? Quite likely. But, in my
insane Silman-mind, none of this matters. Rowson
did what other knowledgeable players are not willing
to do: he worked his ass off and risked climbing
onto a limb.
In my opinion, Rowson is a young, incredibly talented
chess writer. This man has the ability to change
the face of chess writing IF he can somehow slightly
(only slightly!) curb his exuberance, while simultaneously
retaining his passion for the subjects he dares
to explore. Yes, his early works will be flawed.
It’s to be expected. But his biggest hurdle
is to not be beaten down by small-minded fools
or by those that simply have missed the point.
Let’s look at one of the attacks hurled
at Mr. Rowson:
Taylor Kingston:
“Like its subject, this is a very problematic
book; I can’t quite settle on a definite
assessment. At worst it is a pretentious, barely
mitigated disaster.”
This was some of the nicer stuff Kingston said
about THE SEVEN DEADLY CHESS SINS. I’ve
never hidden the fact that I enjoy Taylor Kingston’s
reviews, and I especially love it when he goes
berserk and assassinates a writer who deserves
a well-earned, brutal beating. In this case, though,
he is missing the forest for the shrubs. Here
Kingston puts blinders on and sees nothing but
the flaws, while blithely overlooking the soul
of the message, and the innocence of the delivery.
Looking through the web, I noticed a huge chorus
of Rowson critics and an equally vocal group of
Rowson fans. This in itself told me the book was
important due to an old rule that I believe strongly
in: Whenever two large groups argue over a subject
so intensely, that subject MUST be interesting
and thought provoking.
So, what is all this fuss about? What in the world
is Rowson saying? Let’s take a quick look
at his Seven Chess Sins:
Chapter 1 (THINKING--35 pages) forces us to reconsider
what “thinking” in chess is all about.
His comment, “When you realize that ‘thinking’
means so many different things, your ability to
understand your own thoughts is significantly
enhanced.” is very profound, if you think
about it.
Chapter 2 (BLINKING--25 pages) explores the importance
of critical positions. It also subliminally tells
other authors to seriously consider rhyming the
titles of their first two chapters.
Chapter 3 (WANTING--18 pages) asks the important
question, “What are you playing for?”
It’s a question I ask every student I have,
and I was happy to see Rowson posing it.
Chapter 4 (MATERIALISM--29 pages) “…we
cry out for something tangible, a single weapon
to cut down the thickets of confusion that swarm
all around us. But we choose a knife with an uncertain
blade. This uncertain blade is material; something
we can see, weigh and count.” This is great
stuff!
Chapter 5 (EGOISM--19 pages) “Chess is about
my ‘I’ against your ‘I’;
it’s ‘me’ against ‘you.’
It’s one ego against another. We all have
egos, and chess without ego is unimaginable.”
With deep looks at Inter-subjectivity and Responsibility,
what’s not to like?
Chapter 6 (PERFECTIONISM--15 pages) quotes Winston
Churchill: “Perfection is spelled p-a-r-a-l-y-s-i-s.”
I found this single quote to hold unimaginable
depths of chess erudition, and Rowson’s
later, “This ‘desire to punish’
is very corrosive, and leads you to see all sorts
of problems and solutions that aren’t there.”
sets the tone for an extremely instructive chapter.
Chapter 7 (LOOSENESS--20 pages) gives us another
fine opening quote (this time by Yun-Men) that
speaks volumes, if you are able to take it all
in: “In walking, just walk. In sitting,
just sit. Above all, don’t wobble.”
I don’t have a student that doesn’t
wobble. Quit that incessant wobbling!
THE SEVEN DEADLY CHESS SINS is a fascinating,
original, insightful work by the most promising
young chess writer out there. It’s well
worth owning (in fact, I consider it a MUST own!),
and contains a bounty of knowledge that will improve
your game at the cellular level if the Zen gene
is a dominant one in you.
Quite simply, THE SEVEN DEADLY CHESS SINS is one
of the best chessbooks to come out in many, many
years.
YOU
CAN FIND THIS BOOK AT

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