Memories of Bobby Fischer; Interviews with Nell Freudenberger and Tom Wolfe

Jason Kottke has a nice roundup of pieces about the late Bobby Fischer, including a 1957 Talk and a 2004 book review from The New Yorker. A few months ago, Emdashes’ own Martin Schneider wrote a detailed post about all things Fischer and The New Yorker—check it out. Then read my favorite novel, The Queen’s Gambit, by Walter Tevis, and go even deeper into the bright and dark mental checkerboards of troubled chess prodigies.
Here’s Nell Freudenberger, interviewed by Lynn Carey for Inside Bay Area, which seems to be the online hub for several Bay Area newspapers, including the Oakland Tribune.
And here’s Tom Wolfe, interviewed by Tim Adams for the Guardian. It reminds me of another Guardian piece I’d been meaning to mention, in which Wolfe seems to misquote Dorothy Parker—who’s said to have given the answer, in a parlor-game challenge to use “horticulture” in a sentence, “You can lead a horticulture, but you can’t make her think”—and then not attribute the (mis)quotation. Or perhaps he’s riffing on Parker’s bon mot (or else the reporter misheard Wolfe); what do you think?