Midnight by the Morphy Watch

"Midnight by the Morphy Watch" is a horror fiction story about chess, written by American author Fritz Leiber. It was first published in If, in July 1974.

The story is one of a series of works by Leiber whose settings are places that he inhabited, and whose protagonists are based on himself.[1]

Synopsis

When amateur chessplayer Stirf Ritter-Rebil (a "quasi-anagrammatic" version of "Fritz Reuter Leiber")[1] purchases the custom-made pocket watch which once belonged to Paul Morphy, his own chess skills are supernaturally boosted — but he also begins to experience side effects.

Reception

"Midnight by the Morphy Watch" was a finalist for the 1975 Hugo Award for Best Novelette,[2] and was ranked ninth in the 1975 Locus Award for Best Short Story.[3] Mike Ashley called it "chilling".[4]

gollark: GTech™ build systems just send code to the future, where computers are faster.
gollark: > In fact, in at least one case, tup is optimal.Wow, that's quite a guarantee.
gollark: Do you think it's funnier than Macron?
gollark: Also... 200GB of storage? Huh.
gollark: Oracle is unusually generous.

References

  1. Poetry of Darkness: the Horror Fiction of Fritz Leiber, by Michael E. Stamm ; in Discovering Modern Horror Fiction II, edited by Darrell Schweitzer, published December 1988 by Wildside Press
  2. 1975 Hugo Awards, at TheHugoAwards.org; retrieved July 22, 2018
  3. 1975 Locus Awards, at the Science Fiction Awards Database; retrieved July 22, 2018
  4. Gateways to Forever: The Story of the Science-fiction Magazines from 1970 to 1980, by Mike Ashley, published 2007 by Liverpool University Press, 2007
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