I found a query related to mine in the Nab-L Archives, Jan 8 2002, by Stan.
Milkowsky, who writes: "here’s a gaping whole in my knowledge of VN’s work
and that’s a very > superfluous idea of how chess work. In a note to the same
story VN’s says: > “it oddly resembles the type of chess problem called
“selfmate” (n647). I’ve > got a brief explanation of the type all right, but
is there any way to find > a chessboard layout with a problem that would fall
under the “selmate” > category? And what is the trick again? (“1: checkmate
forced by the side > that is checkmated – called also suimate 2: a chess
problem in which suimate > is required” – Webster’s Third Unabriged, 1976 –
not a particularly helpful > article somehow, at least in my case). > >
And that is it. I would be exceedingly grateful if you could share with me >
your information or refer me to appropiate books/sites."
There is a
reference by Martin Gardner,in one of his books on "recreational mathematics,"
in which he relates The Luzhin Defense to a "suimate." Many commentators and
critics share the same view. Unfortunately, I continue in the dark. To whom is
the term "sui" (oneself) applicable, to the one who creates de determining moves
or to his opponent? My difficulty lies in the distinction between a championship
and a "chess problem". In a world championship,a suimate (as I interpert
it)wouldn't be advisable for, after all, the player's aim is to win the
competition instead of simply divulging a clever "problem."
Luzhin's suicide
cannot be equivalent to a "suimate" in any way when one interprets the term
"sui" as indicative of "placing oneself in check mate", neither when he tries to
to win Turati, nor as an attempt to evade Valentinov's fateful ploys.
in online entries I found: SELFMATE-SUIMATE 19:102: "A move or series
of moves which lead inevitably to the checkmate of a player’s own KI - a problem
in which this is the object. :A moves first and :B has to checkmate :A."
Another: "self-mate - noun Chess .a move that will cause a player's
king to be mated within a certainnumber of subsequent moves. Also called
suimate."
wikipedia wasn't helpful, either: "A selfmate is a chess problem
in which white, moving first, must force black to deliver checkmate within
a specified number of moves against his will. Selfmates were once known as
sui-mates."
My interpretations do not allow me to link "The Defense"
to a "sui-mate". Since those who made such a connection are chess-experts or
mathematicians, I must obviously be seeing things the wrong
way. Right now I feel that I cannot discern any pattern at all. Can anyone
help????
Should Turati have trapped Luzhin to defeat him by checkmating
the white king, the entire plot would be an echo of the tragedy that
befell Oedipus. I don't think that Nabokov would have planned that! Besides, I
found nowhere a reference to sui-mate except as a problem (when it makes no
difference which side is checkmated)