The Tower Struck by Lightning by Fernando Arrabal
The final, definitive match in the competition for the World Chess Championship is about to begin. Contenders Elias Tarsis and Marc Amary take their places at the board. The judges' implacable clock begins to tick, and a hush falls over the capacity crowd in Paris's Beaubourg Center Theater.
But before the players can make their first moves, they are distracted by news of the kidnapping of a high-ranking Soviet diplomat. Tarsis—an artist and an intuitive genius—is convinced that his despised opponent—a world-renowned physicist—is behind the kidnapping. So begins the game, and so begins this darkly comic, metaphysical mystery novel—a European best-seller—by renowned avant-garde playwright Fernando Arrabal.
As the players make their moves (diagrams of which are provided), and we learn how their lives have led them to this climactic moment, the chess match becomes a fierce, seriocomic contest of egos and ideologies. It is a struggle between a man of God and an anarchist, between art and science, between sex and spirit, between two powerful men and two brilliant chess players. It is also an opportunity for the irrepressible Arrabal to lead us on a hundred hilarious riffs—on leftist politics, Freudian psychology, religious philosophy, modern European history, and, of course, the game of chess. In the end, the players' lives, the hostage crisis, and the World Chess Championship climax in a series of twists and surprises that challenge our sympathies and our intellects.
Viking, 1988.
ISBN: 9780670813469. 242 pp.
Translated by Anthony Kerrigan.
Hardcover. Very good in a very good jacket.
Remainder mark on fore-edge.