Searching for Bobby Fischer Audiobook By Fred Waitzkin cover art

Searching for Bobby Fischer

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Searching for Bobby Fischer

By: Fred Waitzkin
Narrated by: Lloyd James
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About this listen

Fred Waitzkin was smitten by chess during the historic Fischer-Spassky championship in 1972. When Fischer disappeared from public view, Waitzkin’s interest waned—until his own son, Josh, emerged as a chess prodigy.

Searching for Bobby Fischer is the story of Fred Waitzkin and his son, from the moment six-year-old Josh first sits down at a chessboard until he competes for the national championship. Drawn into the insular, international network of chess, they must also navigate the difficult waters of their own relationship. All the while, Waitzkin searches for the elusive Bobby Fischer, whose myth still dominates the chess world and profoundly affects Waitzkin’s dreams for his son.

©1988 Fred Waitzkin (P)2000 Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Biographies & Memoirs Fatherhood Relationships
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Critic reviews

“Superb....narrator Lloyd James...so fully inhabits the first-person narrative that he turns the book into a disturbing and fascinating character study." (AudioFile)

What listeners say about Searching for Bobby Fischer

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  • Overall
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    4 out of 5 stars

interesting view of the world of chess

I've recently started getting into chess, so this was a pretty interesting insight into how the chess scene was in the 1980s... the only complaint is that the editing is a bit lacking, on multiple occasions there would be sentences that would be repeated... not a big deal, but was a bit distracting...

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What Good Books Do

Like many people, I had seen the film based on this book years ago. The book is different, truer to life, but the film captures the spirit of the book, even while bringing forward more minor characters, combining some others, and eliminating still more in the interest of time and comprehension. Still, the film took some great scenes directly from the text.

The book, like the film, takes a game that most people have only a passing knowledge of, and makes it exciting. Fred’s son, Josh, is as compassionate in this telling, and Fred’s criticism of himself is introspective and revealing.

I’ve rarely read a non-fiction book this gripping, and now want to watch the film again with this expanded view of the story in my head.

The reader was conversational and matter-of-fact, while still showing excitement and intensity at appropriate moments.

Well done.

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4 people found this helpful

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A fantastic execution of terrific content!

James had a compelling performance throughout the entirety of this audiobook. channeling all of the energy and enthusiasm of the author, it lent authenticity and drama to an already remarkable story.

The only drawback I had was there were several repeated sections of about 10 to 15 seconds throughout the book which unfortunately prevented this from getting all five stars in all categories.

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Wonderful look at the Chess universe

Imagine if a professional writer happened to find himself immersed deeply within the world of Chess. (I am reminded of the book, *Carrying the Fire,* in which Michael Collins applies his descriptive skills to his experience of flying to the moon with Neil and Buzz. Through him, you get to "go along.") Here Fred Waitzkin finds himself taken along. He is telling us about the mores, values, economies, histories, cultures, etiquette, and some of the individuals who inhabit the world that is Chess. Many of Fred Waitzkin's insights are wonderful; some are sublime. It is a worthy book for that alone, but also...

The story kind of mirrors the movie. But where the movie uses at least one chess duel that the screenwriter crafted for dramatic effect, this effort gives us the more down-to-earth reality. Not negative, really, but, rather, spread out across hours. You come away with a liking for the boy and his dad, but without the heartstring tugs that the movie made up. The book is broader, well written, and informative.

NARRATOR: Excellent. Relaxed, easy to listen to, with a remarkable feature that I've never heard before, across hundreds of audiobooks: He emotes appropriately. Over and over, as if Fred Waitzkin himself were speaking, this narrator speaks through a broad smile, or he chuckles, or inserts tones of voice - all at appropriate moments (Remember that this book itself is Fred "talking" to us, with Lloyd James using his voice to give life to Fred's words. It is not a drama.) If I ever write a similar book, I want THIS guy!

PRODUCTION: Yes, the producers wasted a total perhaps 45 seconds of my time by repeating a couple of sentences on three separate occasions. Big deal, NOT.

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Very enjoyable!

The narrator is just a delight with his melodious tone and a bit of laughter at the appropriate moment. One would think he was reading about his own son. The story is good and while their isn’t an in-depth profile of Bobby Fischer it has enough info to satisfy most readers. One will want more on Fischer or just be saddened. I recommend this book and will listen to more books read by Mr. Waitzkin

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Entertaining Story

This book was a pleasant surprise. The characters are interesting and the story flows. The narrator is one of my favorites.

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Enjoyed it.

It will make you think you are going insane, there are multiple parts in this book that several sentences are repeated.

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3 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars

Fathers and sons

This is a good book which served as the basis of a very good film. The story of chess prodigy Josh Waitzkin and his father is a natural for anyone interested in chess and is a must read for anyone involved with children's competitive sports. See the movie as well. Lloyd James does a good enough job, but the editing is a bit spotty, some sentences unfinished and others repeated. Not a serious distraction, though

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great audio book

loved the book. terrific narration with great emotion. I would greatly recommend, especially for people who liked the movie.

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well worth a listen

this was a great book to listen to with plenty of golden nuggets and many take away lessons!

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