Edmar Mednis
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born | Edmar John Mednis March 22, 1937 |
| Died | February 13, 2002 (aged 64) |
| Chess career | |
| Country | United States |
| Title | Grandmaster (1980) |
| Peak rating | 2510 (January 1979) |
Edmar John Mednis (Latvian: Edmārs Džons Mednis; March 22, 1937 – February 13, 2002) was an American chess player and writer of Latvian origin. FIDE awarded him the Grandmaster title in 1980.
Mednis' family were refugees in 1944 during World War II. As displaced persons, Edmar and his two sisters, with parents Edvin and Marita Mednis, were permitted to emigrate to the United States in 1950.[1] Mednis was trained as a chemical engineer, then worked as a stockbroker, but became best known as a chess author. He wrote 26 chess books, including Practical Rook Endings (1982) and Strategic Chess: Mastering the Closed Game (1993), and hundreds of chess articles. He and Robert Byrne annotated many games for Chess Informant.
Mednis finished second in the 1955 World Junior Championship behind Boris Spassky (the two drew their game). He was the first player to beat Bobby Fischer in a U.S. Championship. He played on the 1962 US team at the 15th Chess Olympiad and finished equal third in the 1961–62 U.S. Championship. Tournament results included third at Houston 1974, equal fourth at New York City 1980, and equal first at Puerto Rico 1984. The Puerto Rico Chess Federation, rather than the United States Chess Federation, formally proposed him for the Grandmaster title. He played in the 1979 Interzonal tournament in Riga, his birthplace, and finished equal 15th.[2]
Mednis died of complications from pneumonia on February 13, 2002.[3]
Books

- How to Beat Bobby Fischer (1974). New York Times. Revised edition (Dover, 1998). ISBN 0-486-29844-2. An annotated collection of all of Bobby Fischer's lost games.
- How Karpov Wins (1975).
- Practical Endgame Lessons (1978). McKay. ISBN 0-67913-072-1.
- Practical Rook Endings (1982). Chess Enterprises. ISBN 0-931462-16-9.
- From the Opening into the Endgame (1983). Pergamon Press.
- King Power In Chess (1986).
- Questions and Answers on Practical Endgame Play (1987). ISBN 0-931462-69-X.
- Practical Bishop Endings (1990). Chess Enterprises. ISBN 0-945470-04-5.
- Strategic Themes in Endgames (1991).
- Rate Your Endgame (1992). Co-author Colin Crouch. Cadogan. ISBN 978-1-85744-174-1.
- Strategic Chess: Mastering the Closed Game (1993). ISBN 0-486-40617-2.
- Advanced Endgame Strategies (1996). Chess Enterprises. ISBN 0-945470-59-2.
- Practical Endgame Tips (1998). Cadogan. ISBN 1-85744-213-X.
- The king in the Endgame (1997). Chess Enterprises. ISBN 0-945470-65-7.
