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  2. Edmar Mednis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmar_Mednis

    Mednis was trained as a chemical engineer, then worked as a stockbroker, but became best known as a chess author. He wrote 26 chess books, including Practical Rook Endings (1982) and Strategic Chess: Mastering the Closed Game (1993), and hundreds of chess articles.

  3. William Lewis (chess player) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Lewis_(chess_player)

    Although he considered Sarratt's Treatise on the Game of Chess (1808) [3] a "poorly written book", in 1822 Lewis published a second edition of it three years after Sarratt's death in direct competition with Sarratt's own superior revision published posthumously in 1821 by Sarratt's poverty-stricken widow. In 1843, many players contributed to a ...

  4. William Lombardy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Lombardy

    William James Joseph Lombardy (December 4, 1937 – October 13, 2017) [3] was an American chess grandmaster, chess writer, teacher, and former Catholic priest.He was one of the leading American chess players during the 1950s and 1960s, and a contemporary of Bobby Fischer, whom he seconded during the World Chess Championship 1972.

  5. Maurice Ashley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maurice_Ashley

    Maurice Ashley (born March 6, 1966) is a Jamaican and American chess player, author, and commentator. [1] [2] In 1999, he earned the FIDE title of Grandmaster (GM).[3]Ashley is well known as a commentator for high-profile chess events. [4]

  6. Boris Gulko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boris_Gulko

    Boris Franzevich Gulko (Russian: Борис Францевич Гулько, IPA: [bɐˈrʲiz ɡʊlʲˈko]; born February 9, 1947) is a Soviet-American Grandmaster in chess. Notably, he is the only person to win both the Soviet Chess Championship and the U.S. Chess Championship , and one of the few players with a plus score against Garry Kasparov .

  7. John Emms (chess player) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Emms_(chess_player)

    Born in 1967, Emms learned to play chess at the age of five or six. [1] He finished joint first in the Politiken Cup in 1992 and 1993, [2] [3] and was awarded his grandmaster title in 1995.

  8. Reuben Fine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reuben_Fine

    Lessons From My Games, 1958, ISBN 4-87187-533-4. The Teenage Chess Book, 1965 (assisted by son Benjamin Fine), ISBN 978-4871875790 [27] The Psychology of the Chess Player, 1967. ISBN 4-87187-815-5. Bobby Fischer's Conquest of the World's Chess Championship: The Psychology and Tactics of the Title Match, 1973. ISBN 0-923891-47-1.

  9. Bruce Pandolfini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Pandolfini

    There were more than thirty books on the shelf. The library permitted an individual to take out a certain number of books at a time. Pandolfini took out an initial batch of six books and then went back enough times that day to clear out the entire section. Then he skipped school for a month, instead immersing himself in the withdrawn chess books.