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The Chess Master

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Original title
  
棋王 Qi Wang

Publication date
  
1984

Author
  
Ah Cheng

4.1/5
Goodreads

Language
  
Chinese

Originally published
  
1984

Country
  
China

The Chess Master t1gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcTPugp7neWiWAEFM

Translator
  
William John Francis Jenner (2005)

Adaptations
  
King of Chess (1991), Chess King (1988)

Similar
  
A Dictionary of Maqiao, Miss Sophia's Diary, Retribution, Family Catastrophe, The Song of Everlastin

The Chess Master, or 棋王 (qíwáng), is a 1984 novel by Chinese writer Zhong Acheng, writing under his pseudonym A Cheng. This short novel features characters who were part of the Down to the Countryside Movement after the Cultural Revolution. Written from the point of view of an unnamed narrator, readers learn more and more about the titular character, the chess master Wang Yisheng, and what drives him to play Chinese chess.

Contents

Plot

The story takes place in China during the Down to the Countryside Movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s. The unnamed narrator and the chess master Wang Yisheng are two young intellectuals among many who are sent to a remote farm in the mountains to work. During the train ride to the mountains, Wang Yisheng and his friend talk about how he learned to play Chinese chess, and how he evolved his current strategy. Wang Yisheng tells his friend that his family was very poor, and his mother did not want him to be such a chess maniac, since chess could not earn money. However, Wang Yisheng was very devoted to chess. One day, while gathering garbage to sell, Wang Yisheng meets an old man who is a chess master. Using the principles of Daoism, the old man teaches Wang everything he knows about chess. Wang Yisheng also tells his friend about how his mother always disapproved of his chess habit, but before she died, she painstakingly made him a chess set out of discarded toothbrush handles, because she knew how much he loved chess. The two friends then debark the train and head their separate ways to different farms in the countryside.

A couple months later, Wang Yisheng takes a vacation and visits his friend in the mountains. One of the narrator's friends at the farm, Legballs, happens to be a good chess player. Legballs is very impressed with Wang's ability, and the two become good friends.

After a while of working at the farm, there is a local festival with a chess tournament. The narrator, Legballs, and their friends all take a vacation to attend the festival. Wang Yisheng arrives too late to enter the official chess tournament, but he challenges the winners to an unofficial match after the tournament is over. Word spreads of his challenge, and many people decide to challenge him. He ends up playing 9 people at once without any chess boards in front of him (effectively playing blind), and he beats most of them easily. He eventually defeats the winner of the official tournament, an old man.

English translation

  • A Cheng (2005). The Chess Master. Translated by W.J.F. Jenner. The Chinese University Press. ISBN 9629962373. 
  • Adaptation

  • Chess King, a 1988 Chinese film
  • King of Chess, a 1991 Hong Kong film
  • References

    The Chess Master Wikipedia