Book Name: Frank Marshall Chess Champion
Writer: Grandmaster Andy Soltis
My first genuine contact with chess started when, as a secondary school
sophomore, I took a board in a synchronous display at the Marshall Chess
Club. With some trouble, I figured out how to find the club’s ivycovered,
Greenwich Village brownstone and, subsequent to moving beyond the front
entryway, move just because of the old flight of stairs that prompts the
club’s principle, second-floor playing rooms. At the head of the steps a little,
silver-haired woman gathered my $3 expense for the display, grinned, and
guided me to a table and chessboard close to what I later realized was a
130-year-old chimney. The room clamored with sharp-looking grown-ups
who all appeared to know each other and a ton about chess. I sat
unobtrusively and hung tight for the talk by grandmaster Larry Evans and
his first move in the simul. Following an hour or two, I turned down my
ruler, gathered my scoresheet and textbooks, and started to make a
cautious, somewhat humiliated exit. Yet, the unimposing lady who’d been at
the head of the steps halted me with another grin, praised me on my play,
and gave me an application for club participation.
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