Eero Böök
Eero Einar Böök (9 February 1910 – 7 January 1990) was a Finnish chess player and engineer. Chess careerA five-time Finnish champion who represented his country six times in the Chess Olympiad, Böök was awarded the International Master title in 1950 and became an honorary Grandmaster in 1984. His only significant international tournament victory was a tie for first place with Gösta Stoltz in the 1947 Nordic Championship in Helsinki. Perhaps his best tournament finish was sharing eleventh place in the category 14 interzonal, Saltsjöbaden 1948.[1] Böök played many of the world's top players, and had a plus record against Miguel Najdorf (+1 −0 =2).[2] He beat Max Euwe with the black pieces in Dubrovnik in 1950, as well as the Estonian chess player Paul Keres in the 1952 Helsinki Olympiad.[3] Böök also wrote several chess books. Sample game Euwe vs. Böök, Dubrovnik 1950
Euwe–Böök, Dubrovnik 1950: Private life and non-chess careerHis father Emil Einar Böök was Finland's Minister of Social Affairs in 1924.[4] Eero Böök graduated from the Helsinki University of Technology in 1940 and worked as an engineer for the ports of Helsinki, Turku and Kotka and for the Finnish State Railways until retiring in 1975.[4] Notes
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