William Roland Hartston
(born London
12 August 1947) is an English
chess player who played competitively from
1962 to 1987 with a highest Elo rating of
2515. However, he failed by the closest possible margin to
achieve the results required for the formal award of the title of
International Grandmaster.
Hartston is probably best known as a chess author and presenter of
the game on television.
At the
19th Chess Olympiad, held at Siegen
1970, he won
the gold medal for best score on board 3 (78.1%). He won the
British Chess
Championship in 1973 and 1975, the former being one year after
he was awarded the
International
Master title.
During the 1980s he presented the BBC series
Play Chess
and since the early 1970s, has made many TV appearances for the
BBC, usually in the role of expert commentator
and analyst on chess world title matches, including
Bobby Fischer-
Boris
Spassky,
Karpov-
Korchnoi,
Kasparov-
Nigel Short and Kasparov-
Viswanathan Anand. He has since
diversified into a number of creative areas, running competitions
in creative thinking for
The
Independent newspaper and the
Mind Sports Olympiad. He writes the
off-beat
Beachcomber column for the
Daily Express and books on chess,
mathematics, humour and trivia. Aside from being a chess player,
Hartston is a Cambridge-educated mathematician and industrial
psychologist.
During the 1980s, he was recruited by
Meredith Belbin to work as part of a
multi-disciplinary team researching the dynamics of team roles at
the Industrial Training Research Unit in Cambridge.
He has since been a regular guest on the
BBC
Radio 4 programme,
Puzzle
Panel.
"Bill" Hartston was the first of three British chess champions to
be married to
Woman Grandmaster Dr
Jana Bellin (née Malypetrova).His second
wife, Elizabeth, bore him two sons; James and Nicholas.
Bibliography
- How To Cheat At Chess (1977)
- Penguin Book of Chess Openings (1978)
- Soft Pawn (1980)
- The Ultimate Irrelevant Encyclopaedia (1984)
- The Kings of Chess (1985)
- Chess - The Making of the Musical (1986)
- Drunken Goldfish and Other Irrelevant Scientific
Research (1988)
- How was it for you, Professor? (1992)
- The Guinness Book of Chess Grandmasters (1996)
- Teach Yourself Better Chess (1997)
- The Book of Numbers: The Ultimate Compendium of Facts About
Figures (2000)
- What Are the Chances of That? (2004)
- What's What - The Encyclopedia of Quite Extraordinary
Information (2005)
- The Encyclopedia of Useless Information (2007)
He has written various technical chess books under his full name of
William R. Hartston or William Roland Hartston.
Notes
External links