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Mathematical Quickies : 270 Stimulating Problems with Solutions (Dover Books on Mathematical and Word Recreations)

Mathematical Quickies : 270 Stimulating Problems with Solutions (Dover Books on Mathematical and Word Recreations)

List Price: $9.95
Your Price: $8.96
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Problems with easy, quick solutions if you approach it right
Review: The best problems conform to the following pattern:

1) Easy to state and understand.
2) Appear difficult to solve and in fact are hard to solve if the approach is wrong.
3) Easy to solve if the proper techniques are applied.


All 270 problems in this collection satisfy these criteria. Taken from the `Quickies' column in Mathematics Magazine, these are excellent problems that will tax you if you approach them from the wrong direction. However, once stated, the solution is obvious, and often can be understood by someone with only an advanced high school mathematics background. These problems or their logical variants, form a pool of problems from which you can find many to serve as either challenge problems or even slightly offbeat examination problems. My favorite is the following:

Ten letters are placed in ten pre-addressed envelopes at random. What is the probability that exactly nine letters were placed in the proper envelope?



The answer is zero, since if nine are placed in the correct envelope the tenth must have been as well.

I first read this book about ten years ago and was impressed with the brevity, elegance and at times obvious nature of the solutions. When reading it again in preparation for this review, those emotions were revisited.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Problems with easy, quick solutions if you approach it right
Review: The best problems conform to the following pattern:

1) Easy to state and understand.
2) Appear difficult to solve and in fact are hard to solve if the approach is wrong.
3) Easy to solve if the proper techniques are applied.


All 270 problems in this collection satisfy these criteria. Taken from the 'Quickies' column in Mathematics Magazine, these are excellent problems that will tax you if you approach them from the wrong direction. However, once stated, the solution is obvious, and often can be understood by someone with only an advanced high school mathematics background. These problems or their logical variants, form a pool of problems from which you can find many to serve as either challenge problems or even slightly offbeat examination problems. My favorite is the following:

Ten letters are placed in ten pre-addressed envelopes at random. What is the probability that exactly nine letters were placed in the proper envelope?



The answer is zero, since if nine are placed in the correct envelope the tenth must have been as well.

I first read this book about ten years ago and was impressed with the brevity, elegance and at times obvious nature of the solutions. When reading it again in preparation for this review, those emotions were revisited.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Simple and to the point
Review: This book contains many short and simply put problems with a wide range of difficulty levels. If you're just a puzzle hobbyist, like me, half of these problems are probably beyond your scope. If, on the other hand, you are majoring in mathematics this book should be more up your alley. Though I've often encountered problems requiring a stronger math background than mine own (which only goes up to calculus)many of the problems I did solve require nothing more than common sense. This book has brought me both frustration and satisfaction and I recommend it for anyone who likes math puzzles.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Simple and to the point
Review: This book contains many short and simply put problems with a wide range of difficulty levels. If you're just a puzzle hobbyist, like me, half of these problems are probably beyond your scope. If, on the other hand, you are majoring in mathematics this book should be more up your alley. Though I've often encountered problems requiring a stronger math background than mine own (which only goes up to calculus)many of the problems I did solve require nothing more than common sense. This book has brought me both frustration and satisfaction and I recommend it for anyone who likes math puzzles.


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