The Greenbecker Gambit

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Ben Graff: The Greenbecker Gambit (The Conrad Press)

English language

Published by The Conrad Press.

4 stars (1 review)

‘I only feel truly alive when the chess clock is ticking and the patterns on the squares in front of me are dancing in my head. Very little else gives me the same feeling. Nothing else, that does not involve a flame.’

Tennessee Greenbecker is bravely optimistic as he sets out to claim what he sees as rightfully his – the title of world chess champion. But who is he really? Is he destined to be remembered as chess champion or fire-starter? Either way, might this finally be his moment?

1 edition

A memorable portrait of one very quirky mind

4 stars

The Greenbecker Gambit is an unusual first-person narrated novel in which former child chess prodigy, Tennessee Greenbecker, repeatedly explains to anyone unfortunate enough to encounter him his theories on how his life has been destroyed by a State machinery that dare not allow him to reach his full genius potential. Tennessee is an amazing creation and I loved spending time in his company although it did take me a while to be drawn into his story. During the first couple of chapters, I really wasn't sure if The Greenbecker Gambit would be a good book for me because we initially only get Tennessee's self-centred boasting about himself and his achievements, and he is not a person with whom it is easy to empathise! Once the focus widened enough for me to understand the realities of his life in tandem with his own perception of it however, I was hooked and …

Subjects

  • Literary fiction
  • Chess

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