by Thomas Glavinic
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by Evgeny Bareev
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Based on the real-life historical encounter of Lasker and Karl Schlechter (recast as the fictional Haffner), the book persuasively recreates the Viennese chess world and imaginatively constructs the complex psychology of the protagonist in a prose that itself emulates certain European novels of the period, redolent of the worlds of Knut Hamsun, or perhaps even Franz Kafka in his less metaphysical moments. But this is no mere pastiche: the tournament is played out against the barely alluded to but ever present backdrop of European politics and the future traumas of World War One, and Glavinic subtly explores the difficulties of taking the game as a metaphor for life--for in many cases it has become a replacement for real engagement with the world. Haffner himself refuses to literalize the game and struggles to resist allowing material and political considerations to ruin the aesthetic pleasure which chess affords him. The chess-player here almost becomes the exemplary figure of the artist suffering in a profane world. Thomas Glavinic's Love of the Draw is elegantly constructed and quietly compelling: a fresh and intelligent first novel. --Burhan Tufail
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