<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>First published in Russian in 2014 and written by Genna Sosonko - widely recognized as the number one writer on the history of Soviet chess - this is a truly unique book about the life and destiny of the great chess player David Bronstein (1924-2006).<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>First published in Russian in 2014 and written by Genna Sosonko - widely recognized as the number one writer on the history of Soviet chess - this is a truly unique book about the life and destiny of the great chess player David Bronstein (1924-2006). <br /> Emerging from a challenging background - he narrowly escaped the holocaust in WWII, during which he starved, and his father spent seven years in a gulag - Bronstein faced Botvinnik in the world championship match in 1951 and nearly defeated him. But this 'nearly' inflicted a wound on David so deep that it would not heal for the rest of his life. <br /> Sosonko knew Bronstein well. Their conversations - many of which have made it into this book - not only portray the thoughts and character of one of history's most original grandmasters but also take us back to a time unlike any other in world history. This is not a biography in the traditional sense of the word. Rather, Sosonko's fascinating book asks eternal questions which don't have neat and simple answers. <br /> With a foreword to the English edition by Garry Kasparov.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>"I don't think I have ever read a story that gripped me more than this one. Firstly, Sosonko does a wonderful job of conveying the atmosphere of Soviet (chess) society from the 1940s onwards...Secondly, it is a powerful, tragic story of a man held captive by the memories of his greatest failure. Every page of the book...breathes one obsession: Botvinnik..." - Grandmaster Matthew Sadler in <em>New In Chess</em> magazine, October 2017 <br /> <br /> "David Bronstein's limitless creativity was expressed in many ways. No one is more deserving of a great writer like Sosonko's attention." - ex-World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov, <em>Twitter</em>, 4 September 2017 <br /> <br /> "Genna Sosonko is a Dutch grandmaster who was an émigré from the USSR. He has built up a solid reputation as a faithful yet imaginative archivist of the internal workings of the great Soviet chess empire. His new book, <em>The Rise and Fall of David Bronstein</em> (Elk and Ruby Publishing House), is a chess book with no chess in it. Rather it is a fact-based novella, in the style of Luis Borges, Vladimir Nabokov or Gabriel García Márquez. It focuses on the theme of decades-long, gnawing obsession. In Bronstein's case this is of what might have happened had he defeated the Red Czar of Soviet Chess, Mikhail Botvinnik, in their fateful clash for the world chess championship at Moscow in 1951." - Grandmaster Raymond Keene in <em>The Times</em>, 09 September 2017 <br /> <br /> "Sosonko's memories of Bronstein are well and passionately written." - FIDE Master Johannes Fischer, <em>ChessBase</em>, 25 October 2017<br /> <br /> "...power-play is often compared to chess -- and in the Soviet Union that game itself was a diplomatic and political weapon. Genna Sosonko, a Grandmaster who defected to the West in 1972, writes about this with unsurpassed insight. The Rise And Fall Of David Bronstein...is a deeply personal, and possibly most tragic, account of one of the Russian-Jewish geniuses caught up in this struggle." - Dominic Lawson in the Daily Mail, 30 November 2017</p><br>
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