Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)
Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)
Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)
Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)
Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)
Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)

Auf dem wege zur weltmeisterschaft (1923-1927)

Regular price
$1,500.00
Sale price
$1,500.00
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
per 

Author: Alexander Alexandrovich Alekhine (1892-1946) signed from the library of David DeLucia

Year: 1932

Publisher: Verlag von Walter de Gruyter & Company

Place: Berlin and Leipzig

Description:

1 leaf+225+3 leaves of advertisements pages with frontispiece, diagrams, tables and index. Octavo (8 1/2" x 5 3/4") bound in original publisher's beige cloth with brown lettering to spine and covers. Signed on title. From David De Lucia's Chess Library. (Van der Linde-Niemeijerniana: 3249) First edition.

Second volume of a two volume set covering his games from 1923-1927 and annotated by him.

Alexander Alekhine was a Russian and French chess player and the fourth World Chess Champion, a title he held for two reigns. By the age of 22, Alekhine was already among the strongest chess players in the world. During the 1920s, he won most of the tournaments in which he played. In 1921, Alekhine left Soviet Russia and emigrated to France, which he represented after 1925. In 1927, he became the fourth World Chess Champion by defeating José Raúl Capablanca. In the early 1930s, Alekhine dominated tournament play and won two top-class tournaments by large margins. He also played first board for France in five Chess Olympiads, winning individual prizes in each (four medals and a brilliancy prize). Alekhine offered Capablanca a rematch on the same demanding terms that Capablanca had set for him, and negotiations dragged on for years without making much progress. Meanwhile, Alekhine defended his title with ease against Efim Bogoljubov in 1929 and 1934. He was defeated by Max Euwe in 1935, but regained his crown in the 1937 rematch. His tournament record, however, was uneven, and rising young stars like Paul Keres, Reuben Fine, and Mikhail Botvinnik threatened his title. Negotiations for a title match with Keres or Botvinnik were halted by the outbreak of World War II in Europe in 1939. Negotiations with Botvinnik for a world title match were proceeding in 1946 when Alekhine died in Portugal, in unclear circumstances. Alekhine is the only World Chess Champion to have died while holding the title.

David DeLucia's chess library contains 7,000 to 8,000 chess books, a similar number of autographs (letters, score sheets, manuscripts), and about 1,000 items of "ephemera". DeLucia's library contains such items as "a 15th-century Lucena manuscript, score-sheets ranging from Fischer's Game of the Century against Donald Byrne to all the games of the 1927 New York tournament, eight letters by Morphy, over a hundred Lasker manuscripts, Capablanca's gold pocket watch, [and] the contract of the 1886 Steinitz-Zukertort world championship match". Ten Geutzendam opines that DeLucia's collection "is arguably the finest chess collection in the world".

Condition:

Signed and dated on title. Covers soiled, lightly foxed, edge wear with bumped and rubbed corners, spine ends pushed. David De Lucia's book plate to front paste down else a good copy.