There are more than two hundred belletristic works in my library in which the game of chess plays a more or less important role. Here I have chosen the – in my humble opinion – thirty best novels with chess as one of or the main topic (randomly sequenced):
- Vladimir Nabokov: The Defense
- Fernando Arrabal: The Tower Struck by Lightning
- Rudolf Jakob Humm: Spiel mit Valdivia
- Stefan Zweig: The Royal Game
- Ichokas Meras: Stalemate
- John Brunner: The Squares of the City
- Barry N. Malzberg: Tactics of Conquest
- Walter Tevis: The Queen’s Gambit
- Robert Löhr: The Chess Automaton
- Bertina Henrichs: La joueuse d’echecs
- Elias Canetti: Auto-da-fe
- Paolo Maurensig: The Luneburg Variation
- Thomas Glavinic: Carl Haffner’s Love of the Draw
- Fabio Stassi: La rivincita di Capablanca
- Ronan Bennett: Zugzwang
- Wilhelm Heinse: Anastasia or The Chess Game
- Gustav Meyrink: The Golem
- Samuel Beckett: Murphy
- Guillermo Martinez: Regarding Roderer
- Andy Soltis: Los Voraces 2019
- Ernst Jünger: A Dangerous Encounter
- Friedrich Dürrenmatt: The Chess Player
- Yoko Ogawa: Swimming with Elephants
- Ilya Ilf/Evgeny Petrov: The Twelve Chairs
- David Szalay: The Innocent
- Jesse Kraai: Lisa
- Jennifer DuBois: A Partial History of Lost Causes
- Michael Chabon: The Yiddish Policemen’s Union
- Ignacio Padilla: Shadow without a Name
- Arne Danielsen: The Highest Rank
Just for the record, there is at least one excellent novel available in English translation that is featuring the game of Go: Kawabata Yasunari, The Master of Go (trans. by Edward Seidensticker), Vintage.
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