Professor Stewart's Cabinet of Mathematical Curiosities
Product Details | Similar Products | Customer Reviews![]() | Author: Ian Stewart List Price: £10.99 Our Price: £5.49 You Save: £5.50 (50%) Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours ![]() |
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![]() | Product Details: Hardcover 256 pages Release Date: 02 October 2008 Publisher: Profile Books ISBN: 1846680646 Rating: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sales Rank: 34 | ![]() | Look for similar books by subject: | ![]() | Customers who bought this item also bought:
| ![]() | Customer Reviews:![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() it got me interested in magic squares (17 November 2008)this book admittedly is not laid out in an obviously systematic way but i m not sure that matters. it got me interested in some things that i thought were rather boring, and on the whole though i haven t read it all through yet it does seem to the makings of a very good read, though inevitably some of the puzzles will be very familiar. the version that i have has an incorrect printing of the 3x3 "nearly magic" square on p66, the first of the two examples. the fix is fairly easy though and provides a nice additional problem for anyone interested! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Falls between two stools (28 October 2008)For me this book is neither a "mathematical puzzle book" or an easy to read account of mathematical curiosities. It seems to be a haphazard melange of both and subsequently, due to their being no real effort to put individual puzzles/essays into easy categories, quite frankly a bit of a mess. Much of the stuff here has been done to death (the 4 colour map problem anyone?) but there is some new stuff here as well as some interesting and fun problems which justifies a 3 star review. I just wish it had been better organised ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() fascinating (22 October 2008)a well written and witty look at hundreds of mathematical puzzles, stories and jokes. I am a maths teacher and there is so much material here, it's amazing. I have already used a few of these with my classes and the puzzles have really caught their imagination. Highly recommended although the solution to the problem on page 143 is wrong | ![]() |

















