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Get it between 2025-01-01 to 2025-01-08. Additional 3 business days for provincial shipping.
Product Description The second part of Sergey Voronkov’s three-volume treatise continues from where Volume I left off. It covers the eleventh to fifteenth Soviet championships, the 1941 match tournament for the title of Soviet Absolute Champion, and the main events in the country’s chess history between these tournaments. Themes include the downfall of Nikolai Krylenko, the persecution and disappearance of Soviet chess players during the purges, and the experience of chess players in World War Two. The atmosphere of the time is captured in contemporary accounts and memoirs of key players and cultural figures. We see Botvinnik and Keres established as leading challengers for Alekhine’s throne, with plans being made to arrange a title match. We encounter for the first time and witness the rise of great Soviet players such as Smyslov, Bronstein and Boleslavsky, and enjoy the games of many other stars including Flohr, Lilienthal, Bondarevsky, Kotov and Tolush. This volume contains 84 games and fragments mostly annotated by the players themselves and their peers, and subjected to recent computer analysis. It is illustrated with around 250 photos and cartoons from the period, the main sources being Russian chess magazines and tournament bulletins. Volume I of Masterpieces and Dramas of the Soviet Championships was named the English Chess Federation’s Book of the Year 2021. The jury stated: “The book reads like a novel… A most remarkable, absorbing and entertaining chess history which fully lives up to its title, Masterpieces and Dramas, on and off the board. A worthy winner of Book of the Year 2021 over strong competition.” Review "Masterpieces and Dramas of the Soviet Championships, Volume II (1938-1947) by Sergey Voronkov is a real 5 star book! The period before and during the Second World War is obviously both a horrific and horrifically fascinating period of European history. This book gives an amazing insight into how Russian chess players and players from surrounding regions coped with the profound effects of the war - effects that obviously had a huge general impact, but also often reached deep into their personal lives and professions." - Grandmaster Matthew Sadler, New In Chess magazine, January 2022 "The world would soon be in flames, partly fuelled by unrequited trust. It seems remarkable that any chess could be played, let alone major championships, during the bitter years of the Second World War. Yet there are six Soviet Championships covered in this book, with enough drama and intrigue to last a lifetime. There is so much in this book. My initial, scene-setting skim ended up lasting several days, and my more in-depth read took a lot longer. Voronkov brings an extraordinary amount of detail to the book's 524 pages. Open the book at random and there will surely be something enticing and intriguing staring back at the reader. Masterpieces and Dramas of the Soviet Championships Volume II (1938-1947) is a treasure trove of wonderful historical material. It is an essential purchase and whets the appetite for the third and final volume, which cannot come soon enough." Sean Marsh, CHESS magazine, February 2022 About the Author Sergey Voronkov was born in 1954 and lives in Moscow. He is a leading Russian chess historian, journalist and author. Sergey has written ten books in Russian and numerous articles on Russian chess history. He graduated in Journalism from Moscow State University and edited over 100 chess books for the Fizkultura i Sport publishing house in 1978-1991. He was Deputy Chief Editor of the magazine Chess in Russia (the successor to Chess in the USSR) in 1992-1999 working under Yuri Averbakh. As an editor of the Ripol Klassik publishing house in 2002-2015 Sergey increased the total number of books edited by him to around 150, including fourteen written by Garry Kasparov (the original versions of the Modern Chess, Garry Kasparov on Garry Kasparov and My Great Predecessors series am