Upgrade to Chess.com Premium!

Endgame: The Rise and Fall of Bobby Fischer

  • qixel
  • | Jan 31, 2011 at 7:59 AM
  • | Posted in: Amy's Blog
  • | 2112 reads
  • | 23 comments

Due to hit stores and your favorite eBook reader tomorrow, 1 February, Endgame: Bobby Fischer's Remarkable Rise and Fall, is surely a must-have for all chess players and students of the game.

Written by Frank Brady, author of the well-received 1965 (revised 1973) Bobby Fischer: Profile of a Prodigy, this new book is a complete biography, but concentrates on the life of Fischer after the famous 1972 World Chess Championship match.

Click here for the New York Times review.

Comments


  • 4 months ago

    bell58

    Hi Amy,Do you if the Bobby fischer:Profile of a Prodigy book is still in print or not.My library doent have it. I would like to read it. Thanks Michael

  • 2 years ago

    SonofPearl

    @ qixel - I guess it could be no other way but tragic. At least for chess lovers he has left a legacy of beautiful games.

  • 2 years ago

    qixel

    Ultimately, Endgame left me feeling very sad.

    It is not the story, I think, of a man who found much happiness.

    There is, however, Bobby's chess.  There is redemption in the game that we love.

    Spassky, perhaps, summed it up for all of us in the end:  "My brother is dead," he said.

    Brother, indeed.

  • 2 years ago

    qixel

    According to Brady's research (including FBI files) the Justice Department suspected Regina Fischer, Bobby's mother, of being a Soviet agent.  The investigation lasted for almost half a century.  Interestingly, because the FBI found out that Regina had been expelled from the Communist Party, it considered approaching her to become a counteragent.

  • 2 years ago

    qixel

    Endgame contains the fascinating story of Bobby's 1956 barnstorming chess roadtrip at the hands of millionaire neo-Nazi E. Forry Laucks and ex-con Norman Whitaker.

  • 2 years ago

    qixel

    Interesting that Barbra Streisand admitted to finding Bobby "sexy" when they were together at Erasmus Hall High School.

  • 2 years ago

    qixel

    Got Endgame.  Reading now.  Terrifically excited.  Palms sweating.  Book report soon.

  • 2 years ago

    qixel

    @billwall

    That's great, Bill.  Will you be writing a review?

    I should have my paper-and-ink copy in an hour and a half...just as soon as Barnes & Noble opens.

  • 2 years ago

    billwall

    Got my Kindle copy for $13 (I think the Nook ebook copy is $14.29), which was automatically downloaded about 3 am on Feb 1.  Starting to read it now.  Looks great so far.  At least a dozen new facts I never knew before or saw in print.  I got an email from Dr. Frank Brady today (I congratulated him earlier about the book) and after I told him about how fast I got the book on the Kindle, he emailed back and said that perhaps he should now get a Kindle, which he doesn't have yet.  I will review it for chess.com.  I have his other books, including the two versions of Profile of a Prodigy, and books on Hefner, Aristotle Onassis, Orson Welles and Barbra Streisand.  You can also catch him in interviews on YouTube.  And Al Lawrence did a great review and a profile of Brady in the Feb 2011 issue of Chess Life

  • 2 years ago

    vowles_23

    Thanks so much qixel - should make for a good read then! :)

  • 2 years ago

    qixel

    @vowles_23

    You can find the complete article here.

    It's one of my favorite chess stories, very elegiac in tone and redolent of the Los Angeles I know.

  • 2 years ago

    vowles_23

    Oh cool, how can I get a hold of that article for the full read? (Or would it be too difficult to track down?)

  • 2 years ago

    qixel

    @vowles_23

    Yes, it was actually Bobby.

  • 2 years ago

    vowles_23

    @ qixel:

    The except that you posted - the man that Bill is following, was it actually Fischer?

  • 2 years ago

    qixel

    @billwall, vulcanccit

    I hope to receive my copy tomorrow.  I know I won't be able to put it down !

  • 2 years ago

    vulcanccit

    The hardback arrived at mt house tonight! Can't wait to read it! Ill get it on the kindle as well :)
  • 2 years ago

    billwall

    Pre-ordered it for my Kindle.  I've known Dr. Brady for awhile (he helped with the Marshall Chess Club history that I wrote) and have his other books that he has done beside Fischer, such as Hugh Hefner, Orson Welles, and Aristotle Onassis. 

  • 2 years ago

    MangyMoose

    I am looking forward to reading this. Fischer captured my imagination and sparked my interest in the game when I was a 10 yo boy back in '72.  Thanks for the heads up Amy.

  • 2 years ago

    gretagarbo

    The book looks very interesting. I read "Prodigy" years ago.

    There was a really good article from NIC written in 2008. In fact, I believe the entire issue was pretty much about Fischer. It was  published immediately  after Fischer's death and main article followed him around Iceland to different places.

    Honestly, it was sad to read. The man was deeply troubled.

    He was also , at one time, quite a good-looking guy. The photos in the article of an aged and disheveled Fisher were equally as sad.

  • 2 years ago

    batgirl

    Thanks Amy (and Ryan).  The reviews themselves were absorbing. I can only imagine what the book might be like.

Back to Top

Post your reply: