Isaac Kashdan, American Chess Grandmaster
A Career Summary with 757 Games
Paperback Edition$49.95
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About the Book
This work chronicles the chess career and games of Grandmaster Isaac Kashdan, one of the leading United States players of the 1930s (along with such notables as Fine and Reshevsky). The main body of the work examines Kashdan’s game play, with diagrams and analysis provided for many hundreds of his tournament games, match games, speed games, simultaneous exhibitions, training games and consultation games. Some games are accompanied by detailed contemporary analyses written by Kashdan and other prominent chess masters of his era. There are numerous photographs, as well as facsimiles of correspondence. Also included are tournament crosstables, and indexes of Kashdan’s opponents.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Peter P. Lahde
Format: softcover (7 x 10)
Pages: 360
Bibliographic Info: 11 photos, facsimiles, diagrams, tables, appendices, bibliography, indexes
Copyright Date: 2023 [2009]
pISBN: 978-1-4766-9295-1
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction 1
PART ONE: The Career of Isaac Kashdan
1. The Early Years
The Years 1923–1929 7
Chicago International 1926 8
The Hague Olympiad 1928 8
2. The Early Thirties
Lajos Steiner Match 1930 10
Hamburg Olympiad 1930 10
Berlin Quadrangular 1930 11
Frankfurt International 1930 11
Gyor 1930 11
Stockholm 1930 12
New York International 1931 12
Prague Olympiad 1931 12
Bled International 1931 13
Hastings Christmas Tournament 1931-32 14
London International 1932 14
Pasadena International 1932 15
Mexico City International 1932 15
A Visit to Dallas 1932 16
Early 1933 16
Folkestone Olympiad 1933 17
A Challenge to Marshall 1933 18
Resigns as Chief Editor of Chess Review 19
Plays Against 26 Teams 19
Metropolitan League Play 19
35th Western Chess Congress, Chicago 1934 20
Syracuse International 1934 20
Manhattan Chess Club Championship 1934 20
3. The Simultaneous Exhibitions 22
4. The Late Thirties
36th Western Championship, Milwaukee 1935 29
New York State Championship 1935 29
First United States Championship, New York 1936 29
37th Western Championship, Philadelphia 1936 31
New York State Championship 1936 31
Puerto Rico International 1936 32
Manhattan Chess Club Championship 1936-37 32
Stockholm Olympiad 1937 32
Manhattan Chess Club Championship 1937 34
Metropolitan League Matches 1938 35
Simonson Match 1938 35
Helen Kashdan in the United States Women’s Championship 1938 35
Second United States Championship, New York 1938 35
39th American Chess Federation Tournament,
Boston 1938 36
Horowitz Playoff Match 1938 37
New York State Championship, Hamilton 1939 37
5. The Forties
Havana International 1940 39
Third United States Championship, New York 1940 39
Lasker Memorial 40
New York State Tournament, Hamilton 1941 40
Manhattan Chess Club Formal Opening 1941 41
Fourth United States Championship, New York 1942 41
First United States Lightning Championship 1942 44
Reshevsky Playoff for the National Title 1942 45
Second United States Speed Championship 1943 48
Metropolitan Chess League 1944 48
Third United States Speed Championship 1944 49
Manhattan Championship 1944-45 49
Fourth United States Speed Championship 1945 50
Pan-American Chess Congress, Hollywood 1945 50
United States vs. USSR Radio Match 1945 50
Manhattan Speed Tournament 1945 51
Metropolitan Championship 1946 51
Swedish Speed Tournament 1946 51
United States vs. USSR, Moscow 1946 52
Sixth United States Championship 1946 52
Metropolitan Chess League 1946-47 53
A Reception for Former Champion Euwe 53
48th United States Open, Corpus Christi 1947 53
Argentina–United States Radio Match 1947 55
Manhattan Masters Tournament 1948 55
49th United States Open, Baltimore 1948 55
Seventh United States Championship, South Fallsburg 1948 56
New York International 1948-49 56
6. The Fifties
Kashdan and Family Move to California 58
52nd United States Open, Fort Worth 1951 58
Hollywood International 1952 60
Hollywood Invitational 1953 60
North vs. South California Match 1954 60
California Open 1954 61
Pan-American Chess Congress, Hollywood 1954 61
North vs. South California Match 1955 62
USSR–United States Match 1955 62
7. The Later Years
Chess Editor of the Los Angeles Times 1956 64
North vs. South California Matches 1956–1961 65
The Olympiad, Leipzig 1960 65
Remains Active 65
First Piatigorsky Cup Tournament 1963 66
Delegate to FIDE 1964 66
Second Piatigorsky Cup Tournament 1966 67
California Chess Hall of Fame 67
Lone Pine Tournaments 68
Fischer–Spassky Match 1972 68
Final Years 69
The Kashdan Legacy (by Arnold Denker) 71
PART TWO: The Games of Isaac Kashdan
The Outstanding Games (listed) 75
Tournament and Match Games (1–661) 75
Simultaneous Exhibition Games (662–717) 280
United States Speed Tournament Games (718–734) 291
Informal, Consultation, Practice, etc. Games (735–758) 295
PART THREE: Appendices and Indexes
Isaac Kashdan’s Overall Record
The Five Olympiads, 1928–1937 305
The U.S. Championships, 1936–1948 305
The Tournament Record 306
The Match Record 308
Metropolitan League Matches 308
Tournament Crosstables 310
Bibliography 335
Index of Players 339
Index of ECO Openings 342
General Index 345
Book Reviews & Awards
- “An American chess history buff’s rapture…Lahde’s book is important, and he deserves our thanks for filling a longstanding void”—Chess Life
- “For all-around contributions to the game Isaac Kashdan has to rank at the very top or very close to it…has filled a huge gap in America chess literature…a first-rate research job…McFarland has done its usual high-quality job with excellent paper, library binding and a clear layout. Highly recommended”—IM John Donaldson
- “A beautiful tribute to one of America’s chess giants. The work, 20 years in the making, meticulously weaves together Kashdan’s life with his chess moves”—The Washington Post
- “A fitting monument…wonderful”—Manchester Chess Federation
- “An inspiring biography…deserves to be read”—Georgia Chess News
- “This book should not be missing from the library of any lover of chess history because it is the first (and thus fundamental) biography of this great US chess player”—Quarterly for Chess History