Nikolay (or Nikolai) Nikolaev Minev (Bulgarian: Николай Николаев Минев, 8 November 1931 – 10 March 2017) was a Bulgarian chess International Master (IM) and noted chess author.

Minev was born on 8 November 1931, in Rousse, Bulgaria.[1] He was awarded the IM title by FIDE in 1960. He was the champion of Bulgaria in 1953, 1965, and 1966. He played for Bulgaria in the Chess Olympiad six times (1954, 1956, 1958, 1960, 1962, and 1966). Minev's best international results were: third at Varna in 1960, second at Warsaw in 1961, а tie for first at Sombor in 1966, and second at Albena in 1975. He contributed to early editions of the Encyclopaedia of Chess Openings and the Encyclopaedia of Chess Endings (see Chess endgame literature). Minev and his wife emigrated to the United States in the mid-1980s and settled in Seattle, Washington. He was associated with Grandmaster Yasser Seirawan and his magazine Inside Chess in the 1980s and 1990s.

He died on 10 March 2017 in Seattle.[2]

Books edit

  • Minev, Nikolay; Bobekov, Radko; Milev, Zdravko (1961), Shakhmatni Kombinatsii, Sofia: Medichina i Fizkultura
  • Minev, Nikolay (1967), Karo Kan, Sofia: Medichina i Fizkultura
  • Minev, Nikolay (1969), Strategiyah i Taktika na Shakhmata, Sofia: Medichina i Fizkultura
  • Minev, Nikolay; Neikirkh, Oleg (1972), Parvi s Tapki b Shakhmata, Sofia: Medichina i Fizkultura
  • Minev, Nikolay (1976), Sitsilianska Zatsita Variant "Drakon", Sofia: Medichina i Fizkultura
  • Minev, Nikolay; Yuchormanski, N. (1978), Bulgariyah na Shakhmatnite Olimpiadi, Sofia: Medichina i Fizkultura
  • Minev, Nikolay; Kaikamzozov, Zhivko (1980), Klasichesko Benoni, Sofia: Medichina i Fizkultura
  • Minev, Nikolay (1980), Ednotopovni Endtspili, Sofia: Medichina i Fizkultura
  • Minev, Nikolay; Seirawan, Yasser (1991), Take My Rooks, Seattle: International Chess Enterprises, ISBN 978-1-879479-01-2
  • Minev, Nikolay; Seirawan, Yasser; Donaldson, John (1992), Alekhine in the Americas, Seattle: International Chess Enterprises, ISBN 978-1-879479-06-7
  • Minev; Seirawan, Yasser (1993), B12: Caro-Kann, Sahovski Informator, ISBN
  • Minev, Nikolay; Seirawan, Yasser; Donaldson, John (1993), Alekhine in Europe and Asia, Seattle: International Chess Enterprises, ISBN 978-1-879479-12-8
  • Minev, Nikolay (1993), King's Indian Defense: Tactics, Ideas, Exercises, Seattle: International Chess Enterprises, ISBN 978-1-879479-13-5
  • Minev, Nikolay; Donaldson, John (1994), Akiba Rubinstein: Uncrowned King, Seattle: International Chess Enterprises, ISBN 978-1-879479-19-7
  • Minev, Nikolay; Donaldson, John (1995), Akiba Rubinstein: The Later Years, Seattle: International Chess Enterprises, ISBN 978-1-879479-27-2
  • Minev, Nikolay (1995), The Sicilian Defense: Last Decade (1986-1995), 250 Good and Bad Ideas, Seattle: International Chess Enterprises, ISBN 978-1-879479-28-9
  • Minev, Nikolay (1997), Miguel Najdorf: King of the King's Indian Defense, Seattle: The Chess Library, ISBN 978-0-9661889-1-2
  • Minev, Nikolay (1998), French Defense 2: New and Forgotten Ideas! (2nd ed.), Thinkers Press, ISBN 978-0-938650-92-8
  • Minev, Nikolay (2000), Mastering Tactical Ideas, Seattle: International Chess Enterprises, ISBN 978-1-879479-83-8
  • Minev, Nikolay; Donaldson, John (2007), Akiba Rubinstein: Uncrowned King (2nd ed.), Russell Enterprises, ISBN 978-1-888690-29-3
  • Minev, Nikolay (2008), David Bronstein: Fifty Great Short Games, Seattle: The Chess Library, ISBN 978-0-9661889-2-9
  • Minev, Nikolay (2008), Tony Miles: Fifty Great Short Games, Seattle: The Chess Library, ISBN 978-0-9661889-3-6
  • Minev, Nikolay (2008), Rudolf Spielmann: Fifty Great Short Games, Seattle: The Chess Library, ISBN 978-0-9661889-4-3
  • Minev, Nikolay; Donaldson, John (2012), Akiba Rubinstein: The Later Years (2nd ed.), Russell Enterprises, ISBN 978-1-9364903-9-4
  • Minev, Nikolay (2012), Mikhail Chigorin and Dawid Janowsky: Fifty Great Short Games, Seattle: The Chess Library, ISBN 978-0-9661889-5-0

References edit

  1. ^ Minev bio - confirms date of birth (Note: most other sources give the month of birth incorrectly as January)
  2. ^ "Death Of Nikolay Minev". Bulgarian CF. Retrieved 13 March 2017.

External links edit