Take your brain for a jog around an entertaining new collection of twisters. Many play with clues that are numbers, letters, or words, but are tougher than they look. Three o Find the single letter clue that tells you a monkey's name, where it lives, and its message to you. o Complete a crossword puzzle by filling blanks with words that mean the opposite of the clues. o Finish a joke by making up the punch line.
Martin Gardner was an American mathematics and science writer specializing in recreational mathematics, but with interests encompassing micromagic, stage magic, literature (especially the writings of Lewis Carroll), philosophy, scientific skepticism, and religion. He wrote the Mathematical Games column in Scientific American from 1956 to 1981, and published over 70 books.
I usually love Gardner, his puzzles are fun and quirky; But this collection, I swear, is more than a little murky! The quality is uneven, the logic weird and jerky - It's only due to a few little gems that I won't label this as a turkey.
I'm a therapist in a nursing home and have been looking for materials to use with my clients. This book has a lot of (mostly) word puzzles that are okay, but not really the right type of materials for my clients. Most of the puzzles are either too abstract or too easy, there didn't seem to be a good middle ground.
This is a wonderful book for adults and for bright teens! It includes a few well-known word puzzles, with several new ones! I only disliked that a few puzzles had "tricky" answers, as opposed to answers based on thinking.