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First published in Russian in 2004, The Lubyanka Gambit is a classic work investigating the darkest side of chess history in the Soviet Union. It is the culmination of nearly two decades of research by Correspondence Chess Grandmaster, historian and human rights campaigner Sergei Grodzensky, whose own father was sent to the Gulag in Stalin’s times. It describes the careers and life stories, based on archival documents and witness testimony, of Soviet chess composers, players and famous amateurs who were repressed by the Soviet authorities, ending up either executed or sent to the Gulag. Featured names include Lazar Zalkind, Arvid Kubbel, Vladimirs Petrovs, Petr Izmailov, Georgy Schneideman, Nikolai Krylenko and Natan Sharansky, among many others. The theoretical contribution to the history of composition is one key theme in this work.
The Lubyanka Gambit also looks in detail at the historical context of the purges of chess players and describes how chess was played by prisoners in the Gulags and internal exile. Perhaps the icing on the cake is provided by Grodzensky’s personal memories of the Soviet Union’s foremost Gulag writers Alexander Solzhenitsyn (his schoolteacher) and Varlam Shalamov (his father’s close friend). This book contains 72 full games and fragments analyzed by the participants, contemporaries, the author and other leading players, as well as 145 computer-checked compositions.
"The Lubyanka Gambit by Sergei Grodzensky (Elk and Ruby) is a dark and disturbing read. Written by a Russian human rights campaigner whose own father was sent to the Gulag in Stalin's era, it mainly chronicles a series of Soviet chess players and chess composers who disappeared from the pages of Soviet chess magazines in the late 1930s. The reason was of course sinister: they had been arrested and either senteced to hard labour (where many died from their tribulations) or summarily executed... A really interesting book for anyone interested in the darkest periods of Soviet chess history and in particular in the field of problem and study composition!" - Grandmaster Matthew Sadler, New In Chess magazine, October 2022.
Sergei Grodzensky, born in 1944 in the Gulag city of Vorkuta, gained the Soviet Master of Sport title for over-the-board chess in 1985, and the international grandmaster title for correspondence chess in 1999. He twice won the All-Russian Problem and...
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