Learn to "think laterally" and you'll solve pesky puzzles. These 110 puzzles start out fairly easy and the clues get more and more tantalizingly hard to figure out. They come in five sections: Dangerous and Deadly, Easy and Elementary, Interesting and Intriguing, Chastening and Challenging, and Fasc
Intriguing Lateral Thinking Puzzles
โ Scribed by Paul Sloane, Des MacHale, Myron Miller
- Publisher
- Sterling
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 95
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Learn to "think laterally" and you'll solve pesky puzzles. These 110 puzzles start out fairly easy and the clues get more and more tantalizingly hard to figure out. They come in five sections: Dangerous and Deadly, Easy and Elementary, Interesting and Intriguing, Chastening and Challenging, and Fascinating and Fiendish. Just when you're on a roll, here comes a "Wally Test," a series of rapid-fire questions to make sure you're paying attention. 96 pages, 25 b/w illus., 5 3/8 x 8 1/4.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Includes index
<p>Traditional IQ books are for those with a Mensa mentality. This compilation is for ordinary people who want to enhance essential brain functions, such as concentration, memory, and creativity. Uniquely, this book focuses on left-brain and right-brain puzzles, giving a complete mental workout. You
Lateral thinking puzzles start with a normal situation-then they quickly become weird. Take Bob. He smashes the taillights of a stranger's car. But the cops arrest the car's owner, not Bob. Why? Bob had been kidnapped and was inside the trunk when he broke the lights. That's just a taste of the str
Lateral thinking is the key to solving these tantalizing puzzles. Packed with hundreds of brain teasers and mathematical problems, the book will test kids' powers of logic, and patience! "The logic, reasoning, and calculating required by the problems...will delight and torment puzzle fans."--Booklis
"We never grow tired of good news how come' mysteries of this kind....These story brainteasers are often solved in groups...with solvers asking yes-or-no questions of the puzzle poser (the one holding this book, perhaps). A novel feature of this volume is a Clues' section containing sample questions