Kasparov Today
October 17, 2015
There is a nice article on Garry Kasparov in The Times today but it is behind a paywall so it is no use giving the link.
This from it:
(Kasparov) gives about 15 talks a year at $50,000 (£32,000) a pop plus expenses, and takes pride in making each one different. But initially he misunderstands the word “livelihood” to mean “life”, and says at once:
“What about family? That’s pretty important.”
And complicated. His older daughter, from the first of his three marriages, lives close to him in New York where she has just finished a political science degree. His older son, from his second marriage, lives with his grandmother – Kasparov’s beloved mother, Klara – in Moscow. He’s 19 and a heavyweight weightlifter who doesn’t play chess. (“He’s a smart kid, but he’s 6ft 4in and 275lb.”) Dasha is his third wife and in addition to Aida they have an infant son, Nickolas.
On to this intercontinental complexity Kasparov has imposed a sort of order. “It’s a very intense family life but it’s very important to keep in contact with all the kids, so two or three times a year we have a family gathering,” Kasparov says. In the summer, at Christmas and new year the clan meets, usually in Croatia, where the Kasparovs are citizens and owners of a beach house near Split. “The little one hasn’t travelled yet, but he will. It’s what we do.”
The only person missing, every time, is Kasparov’s father, Kim Weinstein, who loved chess but never saw his son win a match.
Kasparov took his mother’s maiden name but in his autobiography he names his father as his inspiration. Weinstein is buried in Baku, to which Kasparov has not returned since 1990.
Will he ever? “It’s a tough question,” he says, the voice almost catching but not quite. “I wish I could go to his grave, but the city is not just stones, it’s the people who live there. The city where I was born doesn’t exist any more. Would I love to go? Yes, especially as my mother would love to go, too, but there’s also psychological pain.”
October 17, 2015
There is a nice article on Garry Kasparov in The Times today but it is behind a paywall so it is no use giving the link.
This from it:
(Kasparov) gives about 15 talks a year at $50,000 (£32,000) a pop plus expenses, and takes pride in making each one different. But initially he misunderstands the word “livelihood” to mean “life”, and says at once:
“What about family? That’s pretty important.”
And complicated. His older daughter, from the first of his three marriages, lives close to him in New York where she has just finished a political science degree. His older son, from his second marriage, lives with his grandmother – Kasparov’s beloved mother, Klara – in Moscow. He’s 19 and a heavyweight weightlifter who doesn’t play chess. (“He’s a smart kid, but he’s 6ft 4in and 275lb.”) Dasha is his third wife and in addition to Aida they have an infant son, Nickolas.
On to this intercontinental complexity Kasparov has imposed a sort of order. “It’s a very intense family life but it’s very important to keep in contact with all the kids, so two or three times a year we have a family gathering,” Kasparov says. In the summer, at Christmas and new year the clan meets, usually in Croatia, where the Kasparovs are citizens and owners of a beach house near Split. “The little one hasn’t travelled yet, but he will. It’s what we do.”
The only person missing, every time, is Kasparov’s father, Kim Weinstein, who loved chess but never saw his son win a match.
Kasparov took his mother’s maiden name but in his autobiography he names his father as his inspiration. Weinstein is buried in Baku, to which Kasparov has not returned since 1990.
Will he ever? “It’s a tough question,” he says, the voice almost catching but not quite. “I wish I could go to his grave, but the city is not just stones, it’s the people who live there. The city where I was born doesn’t exist any more. Would I love to go? Yes, especially as my mother would love to go, too, but there’s also psychological pain.”
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