Irving Chernev
Chernev in 1927
BornJanuary 29, 1900
DiedSeptember 29, 1981(1981-09-29) (aged 81)
OccupationChess author
SpouseSelma Kulik

Irving Chernev (January 29, 1900 – September 29, 1981) was a chess player and prolific Ukrainian-born American chess author. He was born in Pryluky, Ukraine, then a part of the Russian Empire[1] and emigrated to the United States in 1905.[2] Chernev was a national master-strength player and was devoted to chess. He wrote that he "probably read more about chess, and played more games than any man in history."[3]

Chernev's deep love for the game is obvious to any reader of his books. Chess historian Edward Winter commented:

Although Chess Notes items have shown that he sometimes cut corners, he was active at a time when writing and scholarship were not regarded as a natural pairing and when anecdotes and other chestnuts were particularly prevalent. Few were interested in sources. Above all, in the pre-digital age the work of writers in his field was far harder; they could not fill in gaps in their knowledge with press-of-a-button 'research'. …
Chernev's output — clear, humorous and easy-going — gave the impression of effortlessness, but much industry lay behind it all. …
Although his prose was often conversational, it was literate and carefully structured, bearing no resemblance to the ultra-casual 'I'm-just-one-of-the-lads' stuff increasingly seen in chess books and magazines since his time. We have also been struck by the scarcity of typographical errors in Chernev's writing throughout his life.[4]

He wrote 20 chess books, among them: Chessboard Magic!, The Bright Side of Chess, The Fireside Book of Chess (with Fred Reinfeld), The Most Instructive Games of Chess Ever Played, 1000 Best Short Games of Chess, Practical Chess Endings, Combinations: The Heart of Chess, and Capablanca's Best Chess Endings, the last of these being highly regarded by Edward Winter:

Published by the Oxford University Press in 1978 and reprinted by Dover in 1982, Capablanca's Best Chess Endings by Irving Chernev presents (in full algebraic notation) sixty complete games, annotated with emphasis on the final phase. Well over half are absent from the Golombek volume, a fact which underscores not only the inadequacy of Golombek's selection but also Chernev's readiness to embrace newly-found material. Written with deceptive casualness, Capablanca's Best Chess Endings was, perhaps, Chernev's finest book, combining hard analytical work and his customary screwball levity. Only Chernev could write annotations like (page 169) '“Don't simplify against Capablanca!”, I keep telling them at the office'.[5]

In 1945, he and Kenneth Harkness wrote An Invitation to Chess, which became one of the most successful chess books ever written, with sales reaching six figures. Perhaps his most famous book is Logical Chess: Move by Move, first released in 1957. This takes 33 classic games from 1889 to 1952, played by masters such as Capablanca, Alekhine, and Tarrasch, and explains them in an instructive manner. An algebraic notation version was published by Batsford in 1998, with minor alterations to the original text. Chernev died in San Francisco in 1981.[3] He was survived by his wife, Selma Kulik, and their son Melvin Chernev.[6]

Books

Notes

  1. ^ Who Was Who in America, With World Notables: 1982–1985, Vol. VIII (Marquis-Who's Who, 1985), p. 75.
  2. ^ Winter, Edward. "Irving Chernev". www.chesshistory.com. Archived from the original on May 13, 2021. Retrieved April 26, 2022.
  3. ^ a b Arnold Denker; The Bobby Fischer I Knew and Other Stories; Hypermodern Press 1995
  4. ^ "Irving Chernev by Edward Winter". www.chesshistory.com.
  5. ^ Edward Winter's "Capablanca Goes Algebraic", Chess History, 1997
  6. ^ "Chernev, Irving - Chess.com". Archived from the original on June 15, 2010. Retrieved June 4, 2010.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t "Library of Congress Home". Library of Congress. Archived from the original on January 3, 2011. Retrieved January 4, 2011. Library of Congress
  8. ^ Edward Winter; Kings, Commoners and Knaves: Further Chess Explorations; Russell 1999