<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><feed xml:lang="en-US" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/"><id>https://lichess.org/@/Lionter/blog</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://lichess.org/@/Lionter/blog" /><link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="https://lichess.org/@/Lionter/blog.atom" /><title>Lionter's Blog</title><updated>2026-05-05T04:36:08.238Z</updated><entry><id>https://lichess.org/@/Lionter/blog/the-marshall-mystery-looking-for-a-legend-in-queens/xlnGyjGQ</id><published>2026-05-05T04:36:08.238Z</published><updated>2026-05-05T04:36:08.238Z</updated><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://lichess.org/@/Lionter/blog/the-marshall-mystery-looking-for-a-legend-in-queens/xlnGyjGQ" /><title>The Marshall Mystery: Looking for a Legend in Queens</title><category term="Chess_Personalities" label="Chess Personalities" scheme="https://lichess.org/blog/topic/Chess_Personalities"></category><category term="Chess" label="Chess" scheme="https://lichess.org/blog/topic/Chess"></category><content type="html">&lt;img class=&quot;ublog-post-image&quot; width=&quot;880&quot; height=&quot;550&quot; src=&quot;https://image.lichess1.org/display?fmt=webp&amp;amp;h=550&amp;amp;op=thumbnail&amp;amp;path=mTfm3-m38hDD.webp&amp;amp;w=880&amp;amp;sig=192696bddd2b71109bb2cb7fc41a990d5af746ee&quot; /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;New York has a habit of hiding its best things in plain sight. I found him by accident — a random search, an old elevator, a handwritten note on an office door. Behind it: eighty years of chess mastery, thousands of rare books, and one of the most quietly remarkable stories in New York chess.</content><media:thumbnail url="https://image.lichess1.org/display?fmt=webp&amp;h=550&amp;op=thumbnail&amp;path=mTfm3-m38hDD.webp&amp;w=880&amp;sig=192696bddd2b71109bb2cb7fc41a990d5af746ee"></media:thumbnail><author><name>Lionter</name></author></entry><entry><id>https://lichess.org/@/Lionter/blog/out-back-in-5-minutes/uuhNZllY</id><published>2026-05-04T20:15:09.8Z</published><updated>2026-05-04T20:15:09.8Z</updated><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://lichess.org/@/Lionter/blog/out-back-in-5-minutes/uuhNZllY" /><title>Out. Back in 5 minutes</title><category term="Chess_Personalities" label="Chess Personalities" scheme="https://lichess.org/blog/topic/Chess_Personalities"></category><category term="Chess" label="Chess" scheme="https://lichess.org/blog/topic/Chess"></category><content type="html">&lt;img class=&quot;ublog-post-image&quot; width=&quot;880&quot; height=&quot;550&quot; src=&quot;https://image.lichess1.org/display?fmt=webp&amp;amp;h=550&amp;amp;op=thumbnail&amp;amp;path=QBokyOM7GyAZ.webp&amp;amp;w=880&amp;amp;sig=ae67e0db9a854eac8d8e3ce20d115a8568d1c91c&quot; /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;New York has a habit of hiding its best things in plain sight. I found him by accident — a random search, an old elevator, a handwritten note on an office door. Behind it: eighty years of chess mastery, thousands of rare books, and one of the most quietly remarkable stories in New York chess.</content><media:thumbnail url="https://image.lichess1.org/display?fmt=webp&amp;h=550&amp;op=thumbnail&amp;path=QBokyOM7GyAZ.webp&amp;w=880&amp;sig=ae67e0db9a854eac8d8e3ce20d115a8568d1c91c"></media:thumbnail><author><name>Lionter</name></author></entry></feed>