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≡ Postcards ≡

 
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Postcards

In between our summers, we would send each other postcards with notations for our latest moves in a series of simultaneous chess games.

Each August I would go to the post office to purchase a stack of pre-stamped, plain white postcards. I addressed each of them for the partners who I was playing long, remote games with: a boy in Pittsburgh who played the saxophone, a friend of his who was soon graduating from high school, who lived in a town as small as mine, but as far east of Pittsburgh and I was north. These were my summer friends. Except for two weeks in July, I never saw them. We connected with postcards, mailed once every week or so. On the back of each was chess notation that symbolized our moves like the notes on a score animates a violinist when playing a sonata.



 
"White P-K4" was a typical opening. A week later I would be excited to receive a postcard back that read, "White P-K4, Black P-K4." I would touch the ink on that card, feeling a special connection with my chess buddies from afar. It would usually take me a few days to respond with: "P-K4, PK4," and my new move, "N-KB3."