Tim Krabbé

{{short description|Dutch journalist and novelist}}

{{BLP sources|date=June 2022}}

{{Infobox chess biography

| name = Tim Krabbé

| image = Tim Krabbe 1969.jpg

| caption = Krabbé in 1969

| full_name = Hans Maarten Timotheus Krabbéde Leeuw, R. (2012). De zin van het leven: het bestaan verlicht door veertig eigenzinnige geesten. Netherlands: Overamstel Uitgevers.

| country = Netherlands

| birth_date = {{birth-date and age|13 April 1943}}

| birth_place = Amsterdam, Netherlands

| peakrating = 2290 (January 1990)

| peakranking = 3,800th (January 1990)

| FideID = 1000969

}}Hans Maarten Timotheus "Tim" Krabbé (born 13 April 1943) is a Dutch journalist, novelist and chess player.

Krabbé was born in Amsterdam. His writing has appeared in most major periodicals in the Netherlands. Once a competitive cyclist, he is known to Dutch readers for his novel De Renner (The Rider), first published in 1978 and translated into English in 2002, of which The Guardian's Matt Seaton wrote: "Nothing better is ever likely to be written on the subjective experience of cycle-racing".{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2005/jun/30/top10s.cycling|title=Matt Seaton's top 10 books about cycling|first=Matt|last=Seaton|work=The Guardian|date=30 June 2005|accessdate=30 December 2012}} English readers know him primarily for The Vanishing (Dutch: Spoorloos, literally: "Traceless" or "Without a Trace"), the translation of his 1984 novel Het Gouden Ei (The Golden Egg), which was made into an acclaimed 1988 Dutch film for which Krabbé co-wrote a script. A poorly received American remake was made in 1993. In 1997 he published De grot, translated as The Cave and published in the U.S. in 2000. In 2009, he wrote the "Boekenweekgeschenk", called Een Tafel vol Vlinders.

Krabbé is a strong chess player who competed in two Dutch Chess Championships in 1967 and 1971. He maintains a chess website, and is renowned for his writings on the subject,{{citation needed|date=June 2022}} in particular on chess problems; for instance, one of his publications is devoted to the Babson task.

{{cite book

| last=Krabbé

| first=Tim

| title=De man die de Babson task wilde maken

| year=1986

| publisher=Nova Zembla

| isbn=9070711117}}

No longer an active player, his peak FIDE rating was 2290.[https://www.olimpbase.org/Elo/player/Krabbe,%20Tim.html Tim Krabbe at Olimpbase]

His father was the painter Maarten Krabbé (1908–2005) and his mother the Jewish film translator Margreet Reiss. He is the brother of actor Jeroen Krabbé and the multimedia artist/designer Mirko Krabbé, and the uncle of Martijn Krabbé, a Dutch media personality.

File:KemperSnoijinkKrabbe1988.jpg

References

{{reflist}}