Bibliography for the games on "The Great Game"
Sat Nov 7 23:03:00 MST 2015
"The Great Game" refers to the European colonial expansion into one of the last
unvisited places on earth: Central Asia.
In the guises of explorers and archaeologists, Great Britain's
spies were dispatched into the wide area from China to the Caucasus.
Meanwhile, the sleeping bear of Tsarist Russia made its slow expansion
east in its own version of Manifest Destiny.
The expression itself was coined by Captain Arthur Connolly of the East India
Company, just before he was beheaded in Bokhara for spying.
Britain was anxious to sell its cheap manufactured goods, but above all
nervous about India, its only profitmaking colony,
a nervousness that was to grow as the distance
between the powers shrunk from 2,000 miles to a mere 20.
Eventually Britain was essentially to become suckered into the conquest of
Afghanistan, getting stuck there without an exit plan to its ultimate regret.
Games on the Great Game
- Pax Pamir
Cole Wehrle & Phil Eklund;
Sierra Madre Games-2015; 2-5; 60-120
Players are Afghan tribal leaders navigating the winds of colonial power.
If the Russians, British or Afghans achieve supremacy,
the player with the most influence in that empire wins.
Employs area control, area movement and tableau-building.
- The Great Game
John Gorkowski; Legion Wargames-unpublished; 2
Players move historical personalities and troops across a point-to-point
map of Central Asia in yearly turns. Imperial powers strive to enlist
vassal states such as Afghanistan and Bokhara into their camps via
combat or diplomacy. Vassals offer troops and tribute,
but those closest to Russia prefer alliance
with Britain while those closest to India prefer Russia, so an engaging
game of move-counter move unfolds.
Random events include the Crimean War, Sepoy Mutiny and American Civil War.
- Asia Crossroads
Joseph Miranda; Decision Games-2003; 2; 120
Competition between the British and Russian Empires
- The Great Game
Lloyd Krassner; Warp Spawn Games-2007; 2
In this card game one player is the Russian Empire, the other the British.
Players share a common deck with eight types of cards: Intelligence,
Politics, Military, Motivation, Obstacles, Difficulties, Events, Ally.
The first player to accumulate 100 Territory Points wins.
Nonfiction
- Bailey, Frederick,
Mission to Tashkent
(2002)
[UK]
In the afterglow of the Great Game, Col. Bailey was sent to Central Asia to
overthrow the Bolsheviks there. Or was he?
- Blanch, Lesley,
The Sabres of Paradise
(1995)
[UK]
Story of the Russian conquests east, often fought in impossible circumstances.
- Burnaby, Frederick,
A Ride to Khiva: Travels and Adventures in Central Asia
(2002)
[UK]
In the winter of 1875, Burnaby, a young British officer set out
across forbidding Central Asia on an unofficial mission to investigate
the latest secret Russian moves in the Great Game. His goal
was the mysterious caravan city of Khiva, closed to all
European travelers by the Russians following their seizure
of it two years earlier. His aim was to discover whether,
as many British strategists feared, this remote and dangerous
oasis was about to be used as a springboard for an invasion of India.
- Fredericks, Pierce G.,
The Sepoy and the Cossack
(1973)
[UK]
Detailing the Afghan Wars.
- Hopkirk, Peter,
Foreign Devils on the Silk Road
(1980)
★★★★★
[Notes]
- Hopkirk, Peter,
The Great Game: The Struggle for Empire in Central Asia
(1994)
★★★★★
[UK]
[paperback]
[audio]
Hopkirk is constitutionally unable to write a bad sentence.
Not just a great author, but an authorial pioneer since
with this book he really opened up a whole new field for the many other writers
listed here.
- Hopkirk, Peter,
On Secret Service East of Constantinople: The Great Game and the Great War
(1994 UK edition)
Like Hidden Fire: The Plot to Bring Down the British Empire
(1997 US edition)
★★★★★
Imperial Germany enters the Great Game, making strenuous
efforts, before and during World War I, to raise the Islamic
populations of India and the Middle East against the British.
- Hopkirk, Peter,
Setting the East Ablaze: Lenin's Dream of an Empire in Asia
(1995)
[UK]
When the Bolsheviks came to power in 1917, Lenin continued
to press Russian claims to faraway, fabled
places such as Samarkand and Hotan. The intrigues of his
agents and their British counterparts, swashbucklers all,
could come from a modern spy novel.
- Keay, John,
The Gilgit Game: The Explorers of the Western Himalayas, 1865-95
(1990)
[UK]
- Kleveman, Lutz,
The New Great Game: Blood and Oil in Central Asia
(2003)
It seems that there is a new version of the Great Game...
- You know the movie The Man Who Would Be King.
Now read the true story of the colonial American who actually did it:
The Man Who Would Be King by Ben MacIntyre
★★★★★
- Meyer, Karl E. and Shareen Brysac,
- Miller, Charles,
Khyber, British India's North West Frontier: The Story of an Imperial Migraine
(1977)
[UK]
- Nazaroff, Paul,
Hunted Through Central Asia
(1991)
[UK]
In the post World War I continuation of the Great Game,
Paul Nazaroff was the ringleader of a desperate plot to
overthrow the Bolsheviks in Central Asia.
- Skrine, C. P., Pamela Nightingale
Macartney at Kashgar: new light on British, Chinese and Russian activities in
Sinkiang, 1890-1918
(1987)
★★★★★
[UK]
- Teague-Jones, Reginald,
The Spy Who Disappeared: Diary of a Secret Mission to Russian Central Asia in 1918
(1991)
[UK]
- Waller, John H.,
Beyond the Khyber Pass: The Road to British Disaster in the First Afghan War
(1990)
[UK]
Fiction
- Fraser, George MacDonald,
Flashman in the Great Game
[UK]
- Fraser, George MacDonald,
Flashman at the Charge
[UK]
- Hensher, Philip,
The Mulberry Empire
(2002)
[UK]
[
Review]
The story of the disastrous British occupation of Afghanistan.
The mulberries of the title refer to branches left at the
quarters of the British leaders before the revolt in an
unread signal of intention by the Afghans.
- Hopkirk, Peter,
Quest for Kim: In Search of Kipling's Great Game
(1999)
[UK]
Exploring the realities behind the Kipling classic.
- Kipling, Rudyard,
Kim
[UK]
Films
Maps of the Afghan Wars
spotlightongames.com