Chess Fever
Posted: Tue Feb 04, 2020 7:56 am
Mark Ozanne has written a great piece in Chess this month on his new book, Chess Fever. In the interests of full transparency, we share a publisher. That said, I loved this novel anyway. I wanted to post a short review in a personal capacity. Nobody asked me to do this. I just think Mark Ozanne is a terrific talent. This is a book worthy of a large audience both within and well beyond the chess world…
Yugoslavia. 1990. A hungover Sam Renshawe is about to play the most important game of his life. “My clock is ticking when I arrive at the board, eyes half-open, tongue sandpapered, throat throbbing, brain trying to push out of my skull.”
Going into his fourteenth-round game with F P Mitrovic, Renshawe knows that victory will give him a share of second place in an international open. Yet all is far from well either at or away from the board. Having chosen to play this tournament at the expense of his long-term relationship, it seems that Renshawe has been sacrificing people for chess all his life. “When friends came to the door, Matthew Farmer with his pet football, I’d shuffle down to tell them I had homework to do, and burrow back into my room to be with Bobby. Before long they stopped coming…”
Renshawe’s PHD is going nowhere as studying chess is all consuming. He can’t even enjoy a meal with his partner without sneaking off to analyse a chess position under the bed covers. All the old excuses are there as to why chess commitments cannot be altered. “I entered it a long time ago when I didn’t know we would be doing anything that weekend. And now I can’t cancel it. I checked with the organisers.” I lied. The passages where Renshawe fails to quite take in what his other half is saying because he is thinking about chess, are brilliantly written and certainly prompted uncomfortable memories for me, as they doubtless will for many other players.
However, chess itself is hardly proving to be a rewarding mistress. Renshawe reflects on how the dream compared to the reality, the one time he qualified for the British Championship. “But they beat me up in Eastbourne. The grandmasters and masters, they eyed me up, and they knew straight away that I wasn’t one of them, wasn’t made from the same stuff, hadn’t done my time. And they wouldn’t leave me alone. They tripped me up at breakfast, they gave me a slap before bed, and they were waiting for me in the showers. They did me over in Eastbourne.”
Perhaps even more dispiriting for Renshawe was his encounter with a Spassky, well past his prime, in a French simul. After the event, in conversation, it transpired that Spassky had seen a move Renshawe hadn’t even considered and could reel off a whole host of variations, despite having been battling with many other players. “However, rather than inspiring me to become like him, it made me realise my human limitations, my mortality and the impossibility of ever changing it.”
At the core of the book is the game between Renshawe and Mitrovic. This is the best extended piece of writing on a single game I have ever read. I don’t want to write much about this here as that might spoil the reader’s enjoyment. It needs to be lived and experienced. It made my heart race as much as playing an actual game and there is no higher accolade than that. A real roller-coaster. As with the rest of the novel, the use of language is exquisite. To give an example, when Mitrovic faces a difficult choice, it is described like this. “I am pleased to see that his forearms are back on the table and that he looks like someone about to start an unpleasant but necessary piece of work, like the monthly deep clean of his butcher’s shop.”
I think many chess players will sympathise to a degree with Renshawe’s obsession. I had to suppress the unhealthy thought more than once that if I studied like he did, maybe I would be a better player. However, it is clearly no way to live. More seriously, the challenges of balancing chess against life, of seeing the game we love for what it is and what it isn’t, what it can offer and what else we need is beautifully conveyed. Renshawe certainly ends the book better placed to accept his limitations, to embrace a life that includes chess but is not wholly chess. He is ultimately altogether a better prospect as both chess player and potential partner.
Yugoslavia. 1990. A hungover Sam Renshawe is about to play the most important game of his life. “My clock is ticking when I arrive at the board, eyes half-open, tongue sandpapered, throat throbbing, brain trying to push out of my skull.”
Going into his fourteenth-round game with F P Mitrovic, Renshawe knows that victory will give him a share of second place in an international open. Yet all is far from well either at or away from the board. Having chosen to play this tournament at the expense of his long-term relationship, it seems that Renshawe has been sacrificing people for chess all his life. “When friends came to the door, Matthew Farmer with his pet football, I’d shuffle down to tell them I had homework to do, and burrow back into my room to be with Bobby. Before long they stopped coming…”
Renshawe’s PHD is going nowhere as studying chess is all consuming. He can’t even enjoy a meal with his partner without sneaking off to analyse a chess position under the bed covers. All the old excuses are there as to why chess commitments cannot be altered. “I entered it a long time ago when I didn’t know we would be doing anything that weekend. And now I can’t cancel it. I checked with the organisers.” I lied. The passages where Renshawe fails to quite take in what his other half is saying because he is thinking about chess, are brilliantly written and certainly prompted uncomfortable memories for me, as they doubtless will for many other players.
However, chess itself is hardly proving to be a rewarding mistress. Renshawe reflects on how the dream compared to the reality, the one time he qualified for the British Championship. “But they beat me up in Eastbourne. The grandmasters and masters, they eyed me up, and they knew straight away that I wasn’t one of them, wasn’t made from the same stuff, hadn’t done my time. And they wouldn’t leave me alone. They tripped me up at breakfast, they gave me a slap before bed, and they were waiting for me in the showers. They did me over in Eastbourne.”
Perhaps even more dispiriting for Renshawe was his encounter with a Spassky, well past his prime, in a French simul. After the event, in conversation, it transpired that Spassky had seen a move Renshawe hadn’t even considered and could reel off a whole host of variations, despite having been battling with many other players. “However, rather than inspiring me to become like him, it made me realise my human limitations, my mortality and the impossibility of ever changing it.”
At the core of the book is the game between Renshawe and Mitrovic. This is the best extended piece of writing on a single game I have ever read. I don’t want to write much about this here as that might spoil the reader’s enjoyment. It needs to be lived and experienced. It made my heart race as much as playing an actual game and there is no higher accolade than that. A real roller-coaster. As with the rest of the novel, the use of language is exquisite. To give an example, when Mitrovic faces a difficult choice, it is described like this. “I am pleased to see that his forearms are back on the table and that he looks like someone about to start an unpleasant but necessary piece of work, like the monthly deep clean of his butcher’s shop.”
I think many chess players will sympathise to a degree with Renshawe’s obsession. I had to suppress the unhealthy thought more than once that if I studied like he did, maybe I would be a better player. However, it is clearly no way to live. More seriously, the challenges of balancing chess against life, of seeing the game we love for what it is and what it isn’t, what it can offer and what else we need is beautifully conveyed. Renshawe certainly ends the book better placed to accept his limitations, to embrace a life that includes chess but is not wholly chess. He is ultimately altogether a better prospect as both chess player and potential partner.