Paul
Hoffman:
King's Gambit: A Son, a Father, and the World's Most Dangerous Game
Chess aficionado and journalist Paul Hoffman is no stranger to the pages of
ChessBase. We reported here on his stimulating
game in Tripoli against women's world champion Antoaneta Stefanova; his
role as the color commentator for ESPN's live coverage of the match between
Garry Kasparov and the computer X3D Fritz; and his involvement in a multimillion-dollar
ad campaign for Sharp that featured a puzzle involving the the royal game.
Paul is an award-winning, best-selling author, and his books explore the fuzzy
line between genius, obsession, and madness. His previous subjects have included
mathematics (The Man Who Loved Only Numbers) and early aviation (Wings of Madness).
In his latest book, King's Gambit: A Son, a Father, and the World's
Most Dangerous Game, which is being published this week, Paul
trains his pen and wit on the chess world. At 448 pages (and 1.4 pounds), this
is his most substantial and personal work yet. King's Gambit is in
part a memoir – the story of his childhood weekends in New York's Greenwich
Village with his brilliant bohemian cardsharp of a dad and his total immersion
in chess to avoid dealing with troubling family issues. It is also a very intimate
look at the obsessive world of championship chess.
Paul is interested in the strong raw emotions and extreme behavior that chess
brings out in both professionals and amateurs alike. King's Gambit
features revealing portraits of Garry Kasparov ("There are things about
the game that even I don't understand"), Nigel Short ("I was in tears;
I had been destroyed in front of the whole world"), Joel Lautier ("Most
strong players are completely self-centered…. They are blind to how other
people feel or else simply don't care"), Bruce Pandolfini ("I definitely
miss the rush from wiping out an opponent"), two-time U.S. Women's Champion
Jennifer Shahade ("Chess is not relaxing; it's stressful even if you win"),
rising U.S. star Irina Krush ("I believe that chess can bring me closer
to the spiritual world in a way that simple material stuff can't") and
two-time Canadian champion Pascal Charbonneau ("I am not the world's biggest
geek"). These players talk about the emotional highs and lows of victory
and defeat and why the game is so punishing on the ego and yet so singularly
rewarding.

Paul Hoffmann (middle) anchoring the ESPN coverage of Kasparov vs
X3D Fritz
in January 2003, together with GMs Maurice Ashley and Yasser Seirawan
The most interesting character in King's Gambit may well be Paul's
charismatic but difficult father. He was a part-time literature professor whose
specialty was what he proudly called "the grotesque and perverse"
in contemporary American and Anglo-Irish fiction. He speed-read three novels
a day and had a photographic memory. He was also a tabloid journalist who wrote
trashy celebrity profiles under female pseudonyms. He paid Paul's college tuition
at Harvard by hustling ping pong, billiards, Scrabble, and poker, and making
side bets on chess games.
Paul
has posted the beginning of King's Gambit on his
web site and blog. At the start he is a young teenager and he is playing
a game (in 1970 or so) against grandmaster Nicholas Rossolimo, who operated
a chess parlor in Greenwich Village. As they play, Rossolimo consumes glass
after glass of wine and gives Hoffman's dad a long boozy lecture on Sartre and
Nabokov. We won't give away how the story ends. Read
it yourself.
Links
Paul Hoffman's book is available at Amazon at a special introductory price
of 34% off. You may also be interesed in the other two books, mentioned above,
which we are currently reading with great enjoyment. Tip: start with Wings
of Madness (after King's Gambit). It is a fascinating tale of an aviation
pioneer's obscession.