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Will Shortz Presents Summertime Sudoku: 100 Wordless Crossword Puzzles

Will Shortz Presents Summertime Sudoku: 100 Wordless Crossword Puzzles

Current price: $14.99
Publication Date: June 7th, 2011
Publisher:
St. Martin's Griffin
ISBN:
9780312588441
Pages:
128
Usually Ships within 5 Days from our Wholesaler

Description

Brighten your day with sudoku!

This collection of easy-to-solve sudoku puzzles from puzzlemaster Will Shortz is perfect for solvers looking for a fun way to unwind this summer. So grab a pencil and watch these sunny puzzles chase the clouds away.

Features:
100 easy to hard puzzles
Edited by legendary New York Times crossword editor Will Shortz
Big grids with lots of space for easy solving

About the Author

Will Shortz has been the crossword puzzle editor of The New York Times since 1993. He is also the puzzlemaster on NPR’s Weekend Edition Sunday and is founder and director of the annual American Crossword Puzzle Tournament. He has edited countless books of crossword puzzles, Sudoku, KenKen, and all manner of brain-busters.

Will Shortz has been the crossword puzzle editor of The New York Times since 1993. He is also the puzzlemaster on NPR’s Weekend Edition Sunday and is founder and director of the annual American Crossword Puzzle Tournament. He has edited countless books of crossword puzzles, Sudoku, KenKen, and all manner of brain-busters.

Praise for Will Shortz Presents Summertime Sudoku: 100 Wordless Crossword Puzzles

“A puzzling global phenomenon” —The Economist

“The biggest craze to hit The Times since the first crossword puzzle was published in 1935.” —The Times of London

“England's most addictive newspaper puzzle.” —New York magazine

“The latest craze in games” —BBC News

“Sudoku is dangerous stuff. Forget work and family—think papers hurled across the room and industrial-sized blobs of correction fluid. I love it!”” —The Times of London

“Sudokus are to the first decade of the 21st century what Rubik's Cube was to the 1970s.” —The Daily Telegraph

“Britain has a new addiction. Hunched over newspapers on crowded subway trains, sneaking secret peeks in the office, a puzzle-crazy nation is trying to slot numbers into small checkerboard grids.” —Associated Press

“Forget crosswords.” —The Christian Science Monitor