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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my favorites
I found this book for the first time in a box of family give away books. I read it and loved it. That was several years ago, and now I re-read it every time I run out of books to read. Warren and Cochran do a great job of relaying the eternal struggle of good and evil alongside the modern storyline of international spy-games. I didn't want to stop reading this book...
Published on September 12, 2003

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars Chess & Spies
What more could one ask for to feed your inner nerd than chess, spies, and a good dose of Hindu mysticism? While the authors may have taken some license with all three, they wove them together into an enjoyable, engaging read.
Published on September 17, 2008 by Dan Perlman


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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my favorites, September 12, 2003
By A Customer
I found this book for the first time in a box of family give away books. I read it and loved it. That was several years ago, and now I re-read it every time I run out of books to read. Warren and Cochran do a great job of relaying the eternal struggle of good and evil alongside the modern storyline of international spy-games. I didn't want to stop reading this book when I reached the last page. I was happy to find that Warren and Cochran wrote High Priest to follow where Grandmaster left off. Both of these books are quick reads that often times go too quick.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My second copy, August 2, 2006
By 
Michael Barnett (Pasco County, Fl USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Yes. this is my second copy of Grandmaster..... this book hits a satisfying spot inside me. It's intense, a great combination of spy thriller and eastern mysticism. I can read it every 2 years or so, and love it every time. Too bad the new edition has such a cheesy cover compared to the original paperback issuance. It looks like a chess manual, which it certainly is not, although chess plays a serious part between the two main characters as they meet again and again throughout life. Get it!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars American mysticism rules, ok?, September 12, 2000
This review is from: Grandmaster (Paperback)
What a rattling good yarn. I read this book, and its sequel, a number of years ago... and was lucky enough to find a battered, tattered old copy in my local library just the other day.

I don't know where it came from: it's not on their computerised index.

This a good read. A great way spend a cold winter's afternoon. Justin Gilead is all that's good about America and the East, and the bad hats are truly nasty. There's plenty of magic and mystery.. and the chess games are as tense as they should be. The characters are well-written, the story's a beaut, even the cover design's good.

If this book is ever re-released, I want it. You should, too.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars terrific Cold War thriller, November 30, 2005
They were born on the same day on different continents as Justin Gilead is an American and Alexander Zharkov is a Russian. They first meet at ten years of age over a chess game. However, that night Justin watches assassins kill his father in a seedy Paris bar. He is rescued from the same fate by monks from the highest mountains in Asia who were looking for him as they believe he is the latest reincarnation of Brahma. For the next decade and a half he lives and studies Buddhism under their tutelage.

However Russian troops attack and burn down the remote monastery. Justin survives but is filled with rage and a need for vengeance against the Russians. He obtains work for the CIA enabling him to focus on his target Zarkhov, the chief of the Russian top secret espionage elite unit Nichevo. The life and death chess game between two masters will leave one as the GRANDMASTER and the other dead.

Readers will quickly understand why this novel won an Edgar Allan Poe Award in 1985 though the Iron Curtain has since fallen, turning what was contemporary back then into historical especially the insight into the life and death of grandmaster chess as played by the Russian Bears. Justin moves the action-packed plot forward as his Buddhist trained skills enable him to accomplish seemingly impossible achievements; on the other hand Zarkhov is a vestige of the Soviet Union adding to the sense that this is a historical thriller. Fans will marvel at how newlyweds (at that time) Warren Murphy and Molly Cochran gifted their readers with a novel that remains tense and exciting though the perspective has changed.

Harriet Klausner
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my favorites!, June 24, 2000
This review is from: Grandmaster (Paperback)
Get this book and read it! Good vs Evil at its best. I have lost this book a long time ago and I keep checking on amazon to see if its back in stock. I have no problem recomending this book to anyone!
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Asian Mysticism, and the works, March 24, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Grandmaster (Paperback)
This book is utterly amazing! I found a pot of gold.

JustinGilead is a young American chess prodigy. At ten, his father is killedbefore his eyes in the back of a dirty bar in Paris. Asian monks, fromthe mountain of Amne Xachim, rescue the young boy from a similar fate and raise him for the next 16 years as Pantanjali -- the reincarnation of the reincarnation of the god Brahma (yes, I wrote reincarnation twice). He learns how to control his heartrate at will, suspend his breathing when swimming under water, and stop all bodily functions for hours and days.

When the monastery he lives in is burnt to the ground by Russian troups (ordered by the living goddess Varja) he goes on a quest to revenge the dead and kill "the prince of death" -- Zarkhov -- the head of the elite Russian, secret service that lead the attack.

The prodigy returns to the world of chess, easily maintaining the rank of "master" (hence the title), while doubling as an agent for the CIA -- all in order to get closer to the man he is determined to kill.

This book is fast paced, surreal, breathtaking in it's Asian mysticism set in the modern world. The intrigue is heavily applied and the style is uncluttered.

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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars And there's a sequel!, August 24, 2002
By 
Cymru Llewes (Greenville, NC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Grandmaster (Paperback)
What is it about this book? It seems we read it and then lose it. Rather like Gilead and his medallion. I read it about ten years ago in a local community college library. When I finally had money to spend to buy my own copy I couldn't find it. I was about ready to decide that I had imagined the book. Then I found it in a local used bookstore. And found out there is a sequel! I snapped them up immediately (even though I don't really have the money to spend at the moment but I couldn't risk not being able to find the book like before.) Thank you, Molly and Warren.
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5.0 out of 5 stars I finally found it!, June 12, 2011
I read this book whilst staying at someones house in 1994 - and absolutely loved it, however forgot the name of it.

Periodically since then, I've scanned book shops, libraries, quizzed everyone and anyone, googled & googled ... and I've finally found it. And I've ordered it. And I CAN'T WAIT for it to arrive and enjoy re-reading it again.

Was definitely one of my fave ever reads.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Grandmaster will put you in checkmate for the weekend, February 15, 2011
Not your average spy novel.

Justin Gilead, Alexander Zharkov. Born enemies til death. They meet as child prodigies in a chess tournament. Then again as adults. One is a man who was raised by monks. One was raised to take over the Russian military group known as Nichevo. This book is amazing, I could not put it down. It has all the elements to make a nerd truly happy. There is a sequel titled, The High Priest. And, it is supposed to be a trilogy, however, the authors are now divorced and haven't wrote the third. But I'm dying for it!
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5.0 out of 5 stars When do we get to see: GRANDMASTER: THE MOVIE ?, May 4, 2009
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This book and its sequel "HIGH PRIEST" could potentially be blockbuster hits if/when adapted to the big screen, with all the latest special effects features and efforts to bring comic book characters to theaters, I'm surprised that this story is not already a cult-classic!
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Grandmaster (Otto Penzler Presents...)
Grandmaster (Otto Penzler Presents...) by Warren Murphy (Hardcover - November 29, 2005)
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