It’s your move

Posted April 22 2007

Did Sherlock Holmes play chess?

The only clue lies in his remark about a suspect: “Amberley excelled at chess — one mark, Watson, of a scheming mind.”

Despite this dim view of the game, chess buffs continue to claim this great sleuth as our own. For example, in an article called “The Hoax of his Career,” Thomas Hailey maintains that the master of disguise assumed the alias of Harry Nelson Pillsbury, an unknown 22-year-old American genius who clobbered the world’s best in his debut at Hastings 1895.

After all, didn’t Pillsbury have a prodigious memory, a prominent nose, hollowed cheek bones and piercing eyes? “Finally, he wearied as an active chessplayer and so Sherlock killed off Pillsbury in a fake death in 1906 and retired from the detection arena to bee raising in Sussex,” wrote Hailey with tongue firmly planted in his cheek.

Here is the full article.

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Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
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