Dictionary of Mathematical Games, Puzzles, and Amusements
by Harry Edwin Eiss
February 1988, 292pp, 6 1/8x9 1/4
1 volume, Greenwood

Hardcover: 978-0-313-24714-9
$70, £54, 61€, A96
Please contact your preferred distributor for pricing.

[This volume] should find a place in large public libraries, high schools with advanced math programs, and especially in academic libraries catering to mathematically oriented faculty and students. Reference Books Bulletin

Mathematical play has challenged and stimulated human ingenuity throughout recorded history. It has ranged from the common sorts of brain teasers such as mazes, arithmetic story problems, and simple geometric puzzles to sophisticated explorations of questions that still concern modern mathematical theorists. This new dictionary provides a tantalizing variety of paradoxes, games, problems, and puzzles that will appeal to mathematics enthusiasts at every level of proficiency. Eiss introduces his subject with an overview of the history of recreational mathematics and its relation to some theoretical questions that have occupied mathematicians for centuries. Dictionary entries include problems posed by particular thinkers as well as traditional puzzlers that have come down to us anonymously. Information on the origins and history of many of the activities is supplied, and thorough cross-referencing enables the reader to locate all puzzles, games, and amusements of a similar type. The bibliography suggest sources of further information.

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