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    Endgame of Empire: Sultan Khan, Asia's First Grandmaster

    Endgame of Empire by Sultan, Ather; Sultan, Atiyab;

    Sultan Khan, Asia's First Grandmaster

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    Product details:

    • Publisher Fordham University Press
    • Date of Publication 7 July 2026

    • ISBN 9781531513108
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages208 pages
    • Size 229x152 mm
    • Weight 666 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 33 b/w illustrations
    • 700

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    Long description:

    The definitive biography of a South Asian genius who conquered the international chess world on the eve of decolonization

    In the late 1920s and ’30s, the international chess scene was rocked by the success of Sultan Khan, a self-taught prodigy from colonial Punjab. In a brief international career, Khan stunned the chess elite by repeatedly defeating the world’s best players and winning the British Chess Champion­ship three times. Despite his dazzling creativity and peerless endgame technique, Khan’s legacy has long been marginalized or inaccurately portrayed. Written by Khan’s son and granddaughter, Endgame of Empire offers a comprehensive biography of this trailblazing genius who became the first Asian and first person of color to rise to the top of international chess.

    From its origins in South Asia, chess had developed into an emblem of European culture. With Khan’s arrival to reclaim the game, it became a catalyst for the many ways in which individuals, ideologies, and empires clashed in the interwar period. Endgame of Empire offers a vivid portrait of Khan as he navigated challenges on and off the chessboard. His rise was meteoric, but also fraught with prejudice and ultimately cut short by the political realities of his time. Set in the broader context of race, empire, and decolonization, the book celebrates Khan’s genius as a strategist while also uncovering the difficult circumstances under which he conquered international chess. It also provides the first extended accounts of Khan’s life in colonial India before his chess career and his life after professional chess in the Pakistan whose arrival he had long desired.

    In an appendix, former US Chess Champion Sam Shankland walks the reader through six of Khan’s finest victories. This instructive commentary provides both an account of Khan’s style and a lesson for beginning and experienced chess players alike in the strategic ideas at which Khan was ahead of his time.

    At a moment of emergent nationalism in South Asia, Khan’s unassuming brilliance on the chessboard came to represent something greater: a graceful assertion of equality and a prelude to independence. Blending intimate family recollections, archival discoveries, and sharp historical analysis, Endgame of Empire reclaims a legacy long overshadowed by race, empire, and myth and offers a playbook in holding one’s own through adversity.

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    Table of Contents:

    Prologue: Black and White vii

    A Son Remembers xi

    Introduction: Threading the Needle 1

    PART I. EARLY MOVES: FAITH AND FINDING ONESELF

    1. Seeking Serenity 13

    2. Family Gambit 20

    3. O Fortuna! 28

    4. Victory on Home Turf 38

    PART II. WINNING MOVES: THE EMERGENCE OF A MASTER

    5. Empire’s Worst Knight-mare 51

    6. Continental Drift 65

    7. The Game of the Year 79

    8. The Outsider 87

    9. Starry Night 100

    PART III. SILENT MOVES: A LEGACY UNFOLDS

    10. The Return of a Champion 115

    11. Chess and Chance 129

    12. The Aftergame: Picking Up the Pieces 134

    Epilogue: Stepping into Color 141

    Acknowledgments 145

    Appendix: Sultan Khan’s Greatest Games
    Annotated by GM Sam Shankland
    Sultan Khan—José Raúl Capablanca, Hastings, 1930
    149
    Victor Ivanovich Soultanbeieff—Sultan Khan, Liege, 1930 154
    Sultan Khan—Frank Marshall, Liege, 1930 158
    Sultan Khan—Akiba Rubinstein, Prague, 1931 161
    Sultan Khan—Salo Flohr, London, 1932 166
    Savielly Tartakower—Sultan Khan, Semmering, 1931 171

    Notes 177

    Bibliography 199

    Index 211

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