Book Review by Carl S. Portman MBE
Carlsen Goes Ape
MAREK SOSZYNSKI
Marek Soszynski
Preface by Marek Soszynski
Pages: 198
Published by: Self Published
2025 Print on demand (Softcover)
What is this book about?
The
official synopsis:
Dive into the wild world of the Sokolsky Opening with
this unique and entertaining chess book. International chess author Marek
Soszynski examines Magnus Carlsen’s remarkable experiments with 1.b4 — also
known as the Orangutan — across more than a dozen annotated blitz and rapid
games. Blending fresh analysis, practical advice, opening theory, and even a
brief look at orangutans themselves, this book offers both instruction and fun.
Whether you’re a club player looking for an offbeat
weapon, a fan of Carlsen’s creativity, or simply a chess enthusiast eager to
explore one of the game’s rarest first moves, Carlsen Goes Ape delivers an
insightful and enjoyable journey into an opening where anything can happen.
Contents
·
About
the author
·
Preface
·
Sokolsky
Opening
·
Exchange
Variation
·
Myers
Two-step
·
Magnus
Method
·
21
Games and afterword
·
Some
Famous Orangutans
My thoughts and comments
In the preface to this book, Soszynski
proffers a few words about the phrase ‘going ape.’ It is a mid-twentieth-century
idiom meaning to behave in an aggressive, exaggerated or unpredictable way, as
primates sometimes do. As such, there is surely no better, colourful way to
describe starting a chess game with 1.b4
Fair enough!
Magnus Carlsen plays many styles of chess.
Of course, he is famous for playing theoretically drawn endgames out and
grinding out wins happy to sit for hours on end until he emerges victorious.
This approach has been an inspiration to many of us to keep fighting in our
games. I am referring of course to the end of a chess game but this book
focuses on the beginning, the opening
and one of the most obscure first moves to boot.
The provenance of the Orangutan opening has
several theories but the one I am most familiar with is the one where Savielly
Tartakower visited a Zoo in New York at the 1924 congress. It was there that he
saw ‘Susan’ the Orangutan and the ape apparently inspired him to play 1.b4
which reminded him of an orangutan climbing a tree. It might be nonsense, we
will never know but there it is.
It is also more properly known as the
Sokolsky Opening, named after the Soviet player Alexey Sokolsky who wrote a
book about it in 1963. Certainly I have essayed this move in my own games,
albeit only the fun ones online, not the more serious tournament battles and I
have had so much fun with it. For sure it can put the opponent off balance
immediately.
The author shares a few variations before
we get to Magnus, namely the exchange with 1.b4 e5 2.Bb2 Bxb4 and the Myers Two
Step which is 1.b4 e5 2.Bb2 Bxb4 3. Bxe5 Nf6 4.c3!? which Magnus has played
several times. 4…Be7 5.g3 0-0 6.Bxf6
See diagram below;
This is a lesson in when and why to
exchange minor pieces. Here. White willingly gives black the bishop pair, but
the dark squared bishop will be stunted somewhat by White’s pawns. He will
leave the c3 pawn where it is. This is the Magnus method. Look out for it next
time you play him!
Chess
games
There are twenty-one games given, some
against the likes of Giri and Nakamura and others against lesser-known players
such as Weetik or Bok, who is incidentally one of two people in the book to
beat Magnus, the other being Wesley So. These are not classical games, but
events such as the FTX Crypto Cup on Chess.Com or Titled Tuesday matches as so
many are in the databases these days.
The games are great fun to play through and
there are plenty of good sized diagrams to accompany the clear text. There is one
cute surprise in the twentieth game where the tables are turned and Carlsen plays
the Black pieces in a Titled Tuesday match against Szymon Tumular (2591) who
plays 1.b4 and Magnus responds with (wait for it) 1…a6. This cannot be prep,
surely but follow the game and see how his position develops. Note (below) how
he fianchettoes both bishops.
Final thoughts
Clearly this is a book that the author felt
compelled to write. It is a light and easy read with some quirky games, not to mention the cover showing an ape holding a pawn. You
don’t have to take some of them too seriously but they are there to be enjoyed.
If you are a club player looking to surprise your opponent you will certainly
gleam some ideas here. The games seem to me to be a cross between theory and
entertainment.
The games are interesting and just what you
would expect to be served up from quicker time controls. The author does not
seek perfection here, and more importantly neither does magnus. It is more
about the surprise value and having fun dropping a metaphorical hand-grenade
into your opponent’s position and seeing how they respond.
I like the final chapter entitled some
famous orangutans where the author notes the likes of the aforementioned
Susan, Charles Darwin and Jenny, The Jungle book (remember King Louie), Clint
Eastwood and Clyde and others. It adds a touch of humour to proceedings, and as
a Brummie myself, I can see why he included this.
Will this book make me play 1.b4 for a
while? The short answer is yes, I shall employ it in my blitz chess games
online for a while and see where it takes me. Honestly speaking I would even
play it in a club game – but I will see how ready I am for that when the new
season begins. My school chess club motto is Amat Victoria Curam –
victory loves preparation, so have a go at 1.b4 and watch your victims crumble
to your home prep.
I am all for supporting people who
self-publish. No one apart from the elite players makes any serious money out
of chess books so this must have purely been a labour of love and fun to write.
Bravo for that. If you want a chess book that does not bore you to death with
lines of opening theory and you want to see another side to the maestro that is
Magnus Carlsen then this lovely little tome is the one for you. Life is short –
go on, give 1.b4 a go.
Who is the author?
Marek
Soszynski is a Doublemaster, being both a Master of Philosophy and a
Correspondence Chess Master. He was born and lives in Birmingham, England. He
has written or co-written other chess publications.

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