The collection begins in 1957, omitting the famous "
Game of the Century" against
Donald Byrne in 1956 (this game had been included in a small, lightly annotated work called ''Bobby Fischer's Games of Chess'', published in 1959). The three losses are to
Tal at the
Candidates Tournament 1959,
Spassky at
Mar del Plata 1960, and
Geller at
Skopje 1967. Among the draws is his only encounter with World Champion
Mikhail Botvinnik, at the 1962
Varna Olympiad. This game contains the longest piece of analysis in the book, with Fischer concluding that he missed a win in the
endgame. Botvinnik later disputed this, with a refutation from one of his chess school pupils, 13-year-old
Garry Kasparov. Among the wins are his first defeat of a Soviet grandmaster,
Paul Keres at
Zurich 1959, and his 21-move victory as Black over
Robert Byrne at the 1963/64
US Championship. There are seven games from his first Candidates tournament in 1959, but only two from his second at
Curaçao 1962. All the games were played under tournament conditions except for a friendly game at the home of
Reuben Fine in 1963 and a win from Fischer's 1964
simultaneous exhibition tour of the US. Fischer makes several atmospheric observations about his opponents' habits and reactions to his moves. In game 1 he writes that "
Sherwin slid the Rook here with his
pinky, as if to emphasize the cunning of this ." In game 12 versus
Gligorić he recalls that "
Petrosian and Tal both happened to stroll by the board at this instant. Petrosian made a wry face which looked to me like 'Can Black do this and live?'." From game 37: "Poker-faced, as always, Keres made this move as though it were the most natural one on the board." From the game versus Botvinnik: "I could see by the glint in his eye that he had come well armed for my King's Indian." He also gives his opinions on the
opening, mentioning that he had "never opened with the QP
queen pawn]—on principle" and that
1.e4 is "Best by test." ==Reception==