All the Wrong Moves: A Memoir About Chess, Love, and Ruining Everything

All the Wrong Moves: A Memoir About Chess, Love, and Ruining Everything

by Sasha Chapin

Narrated by Sasha Chapin

Unabridged — 5 hours, 27 minutes

All the Wrong Moves: A Memoir About Chess, Love, and Ruining Everything

All the Wrong Moves: A Memoir About Chess, Love, and Ruining Everything

by Sasha Chapin

Narrated by Sasha Chapin

Unabridged — 5 hours, 27 minutes

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Overview

An enthralling journey into the world of chess--a story of heartbreak, obsession, failure, and the hunger for greatness

Sasha Chapin is a victim of chess. Like countless amateurs before him--Albert Einstein, Humphrey Bogart, Marcel Duchamp--the game has consumed his life and his mind. First captivated by it as a member of his high school chess club, his passion was rekindled during an accidental encounter with chess hustlers on the streets of Kathmandu. In its aftermath, he forgot how to care about anything else. He played at all hours, for weeks at a time. Like a spurned lover, he tried to move on, but he found the game more seductive the more he resisted it.
****
And so, he thought, if he can't defeat his obsession, he had to succumb to it.

All the Wrong Moves traces Chapin's rollicking two-year journey around the globe in search of glory. Along the way, he chronicles the highs and lows of his fixation, driven on this quest by lust, terror, and the elusive possibility of victory. Stylish, inventive, and laugh-out-loud funny, All the Wrong Moves is a celebration of the purity, violence, and beauty of the game.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

04/29/2019

In this thoughtful and clever memoir, journalist Chapin chronicles his two-year submersion into the world of chess. Bored with life in Toronto, he “became obsessed with chess after I ran away to Thailand with a stripper I just met.” She returned to Canada, but Chapin traveled and got hooked on the game by Nepalese street players in Kathmandu. He returned to Bangkok and descended “into an Internet chess wormhole,” playing with a club and entering tournaments. Throughout, Chapin describes the highs of playing well and the lows of when his “incompetence was outstanding.” After a few months he moved back to Toronto and fell in love with his magazine editor, Katherine, who distracted him from his chess obsession. In order to fully commit to Katherine he decided to play one last tournament—for a chance to compete against a high-ranked player at the Los Angeles Open—and began training with a chess coach. Leading up to the tournament, he fluidly explains the intricacies of chess, and through his training he comes to realize that, win or lose, his “place in humanity” is not as a chess champion but to be with Katherine. Chapin’s sincere memoir of self-discovery will charm chess enthusiasts, as well as those searching for their next move in life. (Aug.)

From the Publisher

The quest memoir is a balky beast. To tame it as well as Canadian journalist Sasha Chapin does in All the Wrong Moves, you’ll need an obscure but preferably universal target of obsession—chess mastery, in his case—a vague discontent with your present existence, a lover or two, a guru and the globe-trotting freedom to pursue your quixotic quarry…. ‘It’s tricky to explain the appeal of chess to someone who doesn’t play,’ Chapin concedes, yet he makes all the right moves in doing just that.”
Washington Post

“A briskly told coming-of-age memoir…Chapin has a fine eye for the game’s beauty...In the course of his entertaining odyssey, Mr. Chapin offers a Zen-like secret to chess, and to living.”
Wall Street Journal
 
“A witty, entertaining memoir about competitive chess and the author’s obsession with same, which takes him around the world, and brings him glory—along with no small number of humiliating defeats.”
—LitHub.com


“Sasha Chapin writes like someone who knows. He knows euphoria. He knows despair. It’s clear that he’s traveled to hell and back, that he is fluent in languages of the heart that have yet to be spoken, and All the Wrong Moves is the brightest light.”
Bryan Washington, author of Lot: Stories

"A smart, funny, and slyly profound book about the dark ecstasies of obsessive love. Sasha Chapin is a gentlemanly Gonzo, a dirty Bond, and he writes like a dream."
Claudia Dey, author of Heartbreaker

"All the Wrong Moves is a touching and brilliant portrait of masculinity. Chapin writes with arresting honesty, capturing the manner in which none of us are truly in control of our personalities. He humiliates himself in all the right ways, and the results are luminous and profound and hysterical."
Heather O’Neill, author of The Lonely Hearts Hotel

“Thoughtful and clever…Chapin’s sincere memoir of self-discovery will charm chess enthusiasts, as well as those searching for their next move in life.”
Publishers Weekly

“[Chapin] infuses the narrative with exuberant, often funny, anecdotes; glimpses of strategy; and lyrical reflections.... An entertaining portrayal of the esoteric world of chess.”
Kirkus Reviews

“Wryly funny, introspective, and grimly evocative, Chapin’s memoir is perfect for a brief wade into the world of chess, or as a jumping off point for a much deeper dive.”
Booklist

"Whether or not you know anything about chess, you’ll be able to relate to Chapin’s quest to find love, excitement, and, above all, his place in the world."
BookRiot

Kirkus Reviews

2019-04-28
Journalist Chapin makes his book debut with a spirited memoir about his obsession with chess, a game that occupied him for two peripatetic years.

The author first played in high school, when he joined the Pawnishers, "an after-school pack of sweaty teenage boys," motivated less by a desire to play chess than to "belong to some kind of cadre. Having a ready-made, highly ostentatious identity was socially useful." Soon, however, he was seduced by the challenge of the game, honing his strategy from Wikipedia and through online matches. He exulted in beating his brilliant older brother, a triumph that proved short-lived when his brother sharpened his own skills. Defeated, Chapin gave up the game until, years later, he sat down at a chess board in the streets of Kathmandu. Quickly, "that old chess feeling was returning—the dizzy pleasure of the potential maneuvers" inviting him "into a tumultuous arena of mental conflict." That encounter set him off on a quest to become a chess master, with the goal of competing successfully in the Los Angeles Open, an achievement "that would represent a violent assault against the limits of my truly meagre talent." At the time he reconnected with chess, Chapin was experiencing a vocational crisis, "not entirely convinced by the validity" of being a writer, feeling like "a parasite on my own life. Any compelling character I meet," he confesses, "excites me not only because they're exciting but also because I might describe them profitably." Chess proved to be a great distraction and, soon, an addiction. He joined a chess club and entered competitions in his native Toronto, studied with a "charismatic, frank, and viciously funny" grandmaster in St. Louis, and flew to India, "where chess was born," to enter a tournament. The author infuses the narrative with exuberant, often funny, anecdotes; glimpses of strategy; and lyrical reflections on why "chess is about the most human thing you can do."

An entertaining portrayal of the esoteric world of chess.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169212716
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 08/13/2019
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Preface

The 600 Million


Perhaps the surest sign that you’re in love is that you can’t stop talking. You find yourself announcing the name of your beloved at the slightest provocation. Given any oppor­tunity, you engage in a vain attempt to explain your infatua­tion. Everything else seems unworthy of a single moment’s attention or discussion. No matter how shy or stoic you are, real affection demands expression.

And this is no less true when the object of your affection is the game of chess. In other words, when you’re me.

But this poses a bit of a problem. It’s tricky to explain the appeal of chess to someone who doesn’t play. Unlike the beauty of other sports, the majesty of chess is some­what opaque to the uninitiated. Basketball, I’m sure, has infinitesimal subtleties I can’t fully appreciate, but when I’m watching a game, I can still sense that LeBron is doing some­thing really cool. The sheer physicality is imposing—the taut calves, the curves carved in the air by the ball meeting the basket. Not so with chess. All you do is look at two nerds staring at a collection of tiny figurines.

And yet, my love of chess demands that I continue, that I somehow communicate why chess captivates me in ways that nothing else ever could. Why I’ve neglected food, sex, and friendship, on many an occasion, for its charms. Why nothing—not love, not amphetamines, not physical danger—makes my heart beat harder than the process of cornering an opponent’s king.

If you think this is crazy, I agree. But it deserves men­tioning that I’m not the only crazy one. Albert Einstein and Humphrey Bogart were similarly affected by the thirty-two pieces on the sixty-four squares. And, some centuries before that, Caliph Muhammad al-Amin, ruler of the Abba­sid empire, insisted on continuing a promising endgame as marauders penetrated his throne room, decapitating him shortly after he delivered checkmate.

I didn’t get decapitated, so my affair with chess really wasn’t so bad. All I got was the total consumption of my soul.

Like so many affairs, it began with an accidental flirta­tion that became an all-devouring union—two years during which I did little else but pursue chess mastery. Despite my obvious lack of talent, I leapt across continents to play in far-flung competitions, studied with an eccentric grandmaster, spent almost all of my money, neglected my loved ones, and accumulated a few infections. And I did it all for a brief shot at glory—a chance to take down some real players at a tournament in Los Angeles, where my place in humanity was determined, as far as I’m concerned.

Maybe if you come back with me, through those nights of chasing imaginary kings with imaginary queens, along my winding road to the San Fernando Valley, you’ll under­stand my love of chess. Maybe you’ll even understand why, according to recent estimates, one in twelve people in the world plays chess in some capacity. Maybe you’d like to know what’s been captivating well over 600 million souls while you were doing whatever you do.

Frankly, I didn’t feel like I was doing much until chess came along. Sure, there were momentary rages, dwindling loves, and, occasionally, a charming vista. But it was all part of an unformed sequence of anecdotes, through which I was stumbling sideways, grasping at whatever I could, whether it was some form of self-destruction or a nice afternoon walk. By contrast, when chess appeared, it felt like a possession—like a spirit had slipped a long finger up through my spine, making me a marionette, pausing only briefly to ask, “You weren’t doing anything with this, were you?”

 
1

Kathmandu


Anyway, like most people, I became obsessed with chess after I ran away to Asia with a stripper I’d just met.

Courtney made an impression. Before I saw her face, at the poetry reading where we encountered each other, I heard the precise, cutting melody of her voice sailing above the room’s otherwise meek murmurs. And as soon as I saw her, it became clear, from both the way she looked and the way that everyone else looked at her, that she was the unelected supervisor of that evening. She had one of those sharp smiles that you could easily imagine encir­cling the necks of her enemies. She was slim and pale, with severe good looks. Everything she wore was obviously expensive: shiny black boots, shiny black pants, and an extravagantly fluffy white sweater that shed hairs every­where. The room around her slowly became dandered.

Even before we spoke, her presence added a little bit of much-needed electricity to the otherwise un-fascinating evening. The poetry reading was boring. And I went there knowing I would be bored, because I didn’t care about experimental poetry. But I figured that I should go for vague professional reasons. I had recently started a career as a free­lance writer, having published a couple of sensitive essays that had earned modest local acclaim. And in my mind this meant, somehow, that attending tedious literary events was now my sacred responsibility.

She and I met when I started flirting with a friend of hers, whose social pleasantness I mistakenly took for some sort of invitation. Courtney saved me from embarrass­ment by swooping in and derailing the conversation with an avalanche of pointed queries and cleverly backhanded compliments. At first, I had no idea whether she liked me or could even tolerate my presence. She seemed entirely self-contained, like there wasn’t anything I could possibly add to her life, which may have been true. I asked her what she thought of the poetry, expecting a mushy statement of rev­erence of the sort I’d received from everyone else I’d asked that question.

“It was mostly shitty,” she said.

After a few minutes, I got a little better at keeping up with the staccato conversational rhythm that was her spe­cialty, but I still felt nervous. Until, that is, she started mas­saging my knee under the table, apropos of nothing, after we had consumed a helpful amount of alcohol.

Following our first intimate moments, a few days later, I told her that it kind of sucked that we hadn’t encountered each other earlier, because I was moving overseas in two weeks. When she asked me why, I told her the same silly thing I told everybody: I was going away to Thailand so I could write in solitude. At this early stage in my career, I said, I should devote myself to my craft, rather than deal with the constant distractions of my busy life in Toronto. Whether or not I believed this myself I’m not sure, but it was obviously untrue. Writing was going well. I was pro­ducing at a reasonable rate, and I was getting paid pretty generously.

Moreover, since I had never been alone in an unknown country, I had no reason to suspect that it would improve me in any way. Really, the decision was based on fear. I’m kind of an insecure person, and whenever I’m stationary in life for more than a few moments—whenever I’m settled in any lifestyle at all—I start becoming suspicious of the validity of my very being. In this case, I couldn’t stomach the fact of remaining in Toronto, getting paid to put my feel­ings on the Internet while working at a fancy pasta restau­rant. There had to be something more out there, something more noble or treacherous. And while I did have some good friends in the city, I wasn’t entirely sure why they liked me anymore. Perhaps the decisive factor, finally, was that I had some money saved up, which traditionally means that I’m about to do something stupid.

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