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CHESS BITCH
| Women in the Ultimate Intellectual Sport
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| | Jennifer Shahade, 320 pages, 6x9, 1-890085-09-X, cloth $24.00 | |
"One woman's fascinating true story of the life of a championship chess
player. All women should take up the challenge and pick up a board!
Chess anyone?"
- Yoko Ono
"With crisp prose and a hypnotic rhythm, Shahade runs us through a
vast range of colorful, affirming characters. Chess Bitch is a
worldwide trot in search of a common humanity, a precise critique and a
wild ride that transcends it own subject."
- J.C. Hallman, author of The Chess Artist: Genius, Obsession, and the World's Oldest Game
"She speaks playfully and provocatively on chess as meditation, as
art and as philosopy . . . how passion can be more interesting than
genius, and the importance of sexy."
- The Philadelphia Independent
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In the game of chess, where being female has been long considered a
major disadvantage the strongest piece - the Queen - is often
referred to as "a bitch."
Chess Bitch, written by the 2004 U.S. Woman's Chess Champion, is an
eye-opening account of how today's young female chess players are
successfully knocking down the doors to this traditionally male game,
infiltrating the male-owned sporting subculture of international chess,
and giving the phrase "play like a girl" a whole new meaning.
Through interviews with and observation of the young globetrotting women chessplayers who challenge male domination, Chess Bitch
shines a harsh light on the game's gender bias. Shahade begins by
profiling the lives of great women players from history, starting with
Vera Menchik, who defeated male professionals with incredible frequency
and became the first woman's World Champion in 1927. She then
investigates the women's chess dynasties in Georgia and China. She
interviews the famous Polgar sisters, who refused to play in separate
women's tournaments. She details her own chess adventures - traveling
to tournaments from New Delhi to New York to Shanghai. Shahade
introduces us to such top players as glamorous Grandmaster Alexandra
Kosteniuk and current Women's World Champion Antoaneta Stefanova and
such lesser-known players as the flamboyant Zambian Linda Nangwale, the
transgendered Texan Angela Alston, and myriad female players who hop
from one country to another, playing chess by day and partying long
into the night. For those who think of chess as two people sitting
quietly across a table, Shahade paints a colorful world that most chess
fans never knew existed.
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Jennifer Shahade is an international chess icon: She holds
the title Woman Grandmaster and is a two-time U.S. Women's Champion
(2002, 2004). She has represented the U.S. in international
competitions in countries all over the world, including Spain, Russia,
China, India, and Brazil. In 2002 Jennifer received a degree in
comparative literature from NYU, where she was an editor for the
literary magazine Brio. Her writing has appeared in Chess Life, New In
Chess, and the Los Angeles Times Book Review. Through the non-profit
Chess-in-the-Schools program, she coaches inner-city youths, including
the three-time National Junior High Championship team from Brooklyn.
Shahade is a color commentator for the Internet radio station chess.fm.
She has participated in performance art projects at New York's
psychogeography festival, the Philadelphia Fringe Festival, the View
Room Gallery, and served as a juror for a design competition at the
Noguchi Museum. Her webpage is available at www.jennifershahade.com. She lives in
Brooklyn, NY. |
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