MUSIC REVIEWS
THE CHESS MACHINE - Robert Lohr/translated by: Anthea Bell (fiction) | THE CHESS MACHINE - Robert Lohr/translated by: Anthea Bell (fiction) |
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| Written by Deborah Ground Buckner | |
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Author: Robert Lohr; translated from the German by Anthea Bell Publishing Company: The Penguin Press Year: 2007 # of Pages: 344 ISBN #: 978-1-59420-125-4 $31.00 Canada $24.95 USA 4 Stars Reviewer: Deborah Ground Buckner In 1770, Austrian-Hungarian Baron Wolfgang von Kempelen presented his invention, a chess-playing automaton known as “The Turk” in the court of Empress Maria Theresia in Vienna. The Turk featured a life-sized man's head and torso, clothed in a caftan and turban. Its left hand held a long, Turkish pipe. Its right hand rested on a large cabinet, upon which lay a chessboard. Kempelen began his demonstration by opening a series of doors in the front and back of the cabinet, displaying complicated-looking clockwork mechanisms. Then, facing a challenger, the Turk uncannily played a game of chess, winning against nearly every opponent. Kempelen toured Europe with his amazing automaton in an age where the lines between science and entertainment were indistinct. The Turk continually awed its spectators, baffled scientists and frightened the religious who feared it was controlled by some evil spirit.
Historical accounts of the Turk have inspired Robert Lohr's first novel, The Chess Machine (originally published in Germany in 2005 as Der Schachautomat; published in the United Kingdom as The Secrets of the Chess Machine). The story is largely of Lohr's imagination, resting within the framework of Kempelen's invention and his travels, a point clearly made in the Author's Notes. Lohr also provides references for those readers whose curiosity about the real Turk requires further study. Accepting the distortions from history allows enjoyment of a fascinating tale. Lohr has drawn his characters richly: Baron von Kempelen, a bureaucrat hoping to win the favor of the Empress with his new automaton and launch a career of building more inventions; Jakob, Kempelen's Jewish assistant, a skilled cabinet maker and clockwork designer, equally skilled at keeping secrets; and Tibor, a marvelous chess-playing dwarf whose size allows a perfect fit within the concealed cabinet. The viewpoints shift among the characters, though in an artful manner, allowing development of each.
For a first-time novelist, Lohr excels at characterization and description. He tells his story vividly and creates such real characters it is a disappointment to read the author's notes and learn of the ones who are only from imagination. The one shortcoming of the book is the insertion of historical information in segments that break up the story rather than weave into its flow. Fortunately, there are not many of these instances, allowing the tale to proceed at top speed. This is an exciting page-turner, a fine accomplishment in a first novel. Born in Berlin, Lohr worked as a journalist for several newspapers, then began writing for screen, television and theater. He works part time as an actor, director and puppeteer. |
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Hyde Park in
London (England) was host to the 46664 AIDS/HIV charity event to both celebrate
the heroes birthday, and promote awareness of his charity named after the
number he was gave for his 27 year socially unjust prison sentence on Robin
Island (South Africa). July 18th welcomed the `big stars`from Will Smith (who
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Bash`wrote all over it. The performers list was endless, such as Annie Lennox,
and Josh Groban who both gave delightful tributes to Mandela`s legacy.
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