Play chess online, free chess online, chess league, chess puzzles, online games, chess games, chess games database, chess teams, free online chess games, chess clubs, board games and more...

Tags: chess, play chess online, chess online, online chess, online chess, play chess online, backgammon

Chess Forum
ajaxwrite.com   << online chess - < chess - chess > - chess online >>
FromMessage
Posted by jstack
ajaxwrite.com

4/19/2008
07:08:55

Play online chess
Subject: chess playing poets

Message:
Does anyone know of any chess playing poets? I am writing a paper on Jorge Luis Borges poem "Ajedrez"(chess)...however, There does not seem to be any evidence that he ever competed in a chess tournaments. I wonder if there have been any chess playing poets who have competed. I know GM Kosteniuk wrote some poems but am looking for a more serious poet...someone who has or is dedicating his or her life to poetry but also happens to be a chess player.

Posted by fmgaijin
ajaxwrite.com

4/19/2008
14:58:40

Play online chess
Start with Vladimir Nabokov's

Message:
"Poems and Problems" (he also wrote "The Defense" AKA "Luzhin's Defense," one of the major novels about a chessplayer).

Posted by fmgaijin
ajaxwrite.com

4/19/2008
15:05:31

Play online chess
Then Try David Solway

Message:
Decent player (though below master level) and good poet.
———
London Chess Classic: Kramnik's lesson in positional play — McShane-Kramnik, London 2009. Black to play. With two rounds to go in the London Chess Classic, the Norwegian chess prodigy Magnus Carlsen looks set to win the tournament. Vladimir Kramnik, his main rival, is in second place. In this game from round three, Kramnik displayed his refined positional understanding. RB I've been following this tournament online, but I missed this particular game, and more's the pity because I can't find a good continuation for Black. Clearly Kramnik has the better game – the two centralised knights look very threatening – but how to convert Black's positional superiority into a winning position? 1...Nxd2 2 Nxd2 doesn't lead anywhere and ...
Posted by fmgaijin
ajaxwrite.com

4/19/2008
15:18:06

Play online chess
Interestingly Enough . . .

Message:
I am a chess-playing poet myself, but I have only written two poems about chess in my life, both of them haiku.
———
Gelfand Wins World Chess Cup — Boris Gelfand of Israel is the 2009 World Cup champion. Gelfand won the title by beating Ruslan Ponomariov of Ukraine in a playoff on Monday. The first four games of the playoff were rapid games (25 minutes per player per game) and Gelfand took the lead by winning the second game. But Ponomariov, with his back to the wall, won the last rapid game to tie the match up again. The playoff then went to blitz chess (5 minutes per player per game) and Gelfand once again took the lead by beating Ponomariov in the first game when he managed to trap Ponomariov’s queen in 21 moves. Ponomariov rallied again, winning the second game. But Gelfand won the third and Ponomariov ...
Posted by chessnovice
ajaxwrite.com

4/19/2008
16:04:33

Play online chess
...

Message:
If haiku counts, then I can be a poet too. :D

If I am losing,
I'll rearrange your pieces
While you're distracted.

*takes a bow*
———
A tragic knight — The London Chess Classic, a fabulously organized eight-player elite tournament, shaped up as a confrontation between two great chess grandmasters, the top-rated Magnus Carlsen of Norway and the former world chess champion Vladimir Kramnik of Russia. By the luck of draw, they met in the first round, and Carlsen won. The Norwegian GM was still in a clear lead on Sunday with four points in five rounds, a full point ahead of Kramnik. U.S. chess champion Hikaru Nakamura drew four games and lost one. The tournament concludes Tuesday. The Carlsen-Kramnik duel looked like a perfectly played game by the Norwegian, who took advantage of Kramnik's stranded knight. "If one piece is ...
Posted by swapov
ajaxwrite.com

4/19/2008
21:13:33

Play online chess
An old anonymous chess poem (ca.1600)

Message:
When thou with study deep hath toiled
And over-dulled thy braine
Then use this game which will refresh
Thyself and it againe
———
A Game Lasts 163 Moves, and That's Not Even a Record — Chess professionals are conditioned to games that take four to five hours and last about 50 moves, but occasionally play lasts much longer and the contest becomes a war of attrition. That is what happened between Nigel Short and Luke McShane of England in the first round of the London Chess Classic, which started on Tuesday. McShane, who had White, got a tiny advantage out of the opening, but Short defended well, and after 60 moves it seemed as if the game would end in a draw. But McShane, 25, persisted and Short, 44, was forced to continue to defend. It took McShane seven hours, and 163 moves, but he finally broke Short and forced him to resign. That ...
Posted by jstack
ajaxwrite.com

4/20/2008
11:03:27

Play online chess
Thanks everyone

Message:
Nabokov and Solway should give me a good start.
———
Soviet training methods still reign in the chess world — Two decades after the USSR broke up, Soviet training methods remain potent at the chess board. When the field of 128 was reduced to the quarter-finals in the current World Chess Cup, all eight grandmasters remaining had their education from Soviet coaches. The final four-game match now in progress to decide who qualifies for the 2010 candidates is between Ukraine's Ruslan Ponomariov, who won the 2002 World Cup as a teenager, and Boris Gelfand, the 41-year-old top seed. In the semi-finals Ponomariov beat Vlad Malakhov 4-2 while Gelfand eliminated Sergey Karjakin 2-0. In both the semi-final and in the game below the Israeli chess veteran defeated ...
Posted by wschmidt
ajaxwrite.com

4/20/2008
11:23:11

Play online chess
Check out

Message:
the Wikipedia entry on Caissa and the link to the poem there:

en.wikipedia.org