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Mensa Guide to Solving Sudoku: Hundreds of Puzzles Plus Techniques to Help You Crack Them All

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List Price:
$17.95
Pay Mortgages Price:
$12.21
Your Savings: $ 5.74 ( 32% )
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Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Sterling
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 793 EAN: 9781402740114 ISBN: 1402740115 Label: Sterling Manufacturer: Sterling Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 272 Publication Date: 2006-08-28 Publisher: Sterling Studio: Sterling
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Editorial Reviews:
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Here it comes: a revolution in sudoku solving! This is by far the most complete guide to cracking these addictive puzzles ever produced, with tricks even the experts won’t know. While most books might have a few pages of introduction before proceeding straight to the sudokus, this one covers it all. Hidden pairs, naked pairs, X-wings, jellyfish, squirmbag, bivalue and bilocation graphs, turbot fish, grid coloring, chains: every single one is here, and much more too, including the exclusive Gordonian logic methods (Gordonian rectangles and Gordonian polygons) that will turn even the hardest puzzles into a breeze. Of course, there are hundreds of sudoku for practice. A very special addition: a reprint of the very first sudoku ever published in 1979, from Dell Pencil Puzzles and Word Games magazine!
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Sudoku Comment: Wow, on the more difficult puzzles this has been helpful. On my own before purchasing this book I had figured out how to solve many puzzles on my own. This has shown me some shortcuts to use and allows me to practice. Great book, one I would say is worth the money.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Well Written Comment: This is a good book to learn Sudoku strategies. Good examples and easy to understand. I believe that no one book will give you everything that you need to know and that you should have 2 or 3 books on the subject to get a good understanding. This should be one of those books. I also have Extreme Sudoku for Dummies and between the two it has helped me a lot.
Customer Rating:      Summary: More than you ever wanted to know about Sudoku Comment: My husband became addicted to Sudoku in Summer 2008 and soon thereafter infected me. We work (individually) on the puzzle published daily in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. This book has a wealth of information about analysis and techniques including some for puzzle situations so rare and exotic they might never be encountered in a lifetime. The explanations are very clear and easy to follow but the book has shortcomings as to format and layout. I would much have preferred to have the explanation of a particular diagram on the same page with the graphic itself rather than having to flip the page back and forth to follow the steps. The book also has hundreds of puzzles to work on, for those for whom once a day is just not enough.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great tips, so so layout Comment: The tips alone are worth the price of the book, but the layout was a bit disappointing. The puzzles are a bit too small. I like the half page size at least. It would also have been helpful to include a cross reference between some of the more difficult techniques to the puzzles which contain them.
Customer Rating:      Summary: good and bad Comment: I'm with the other people who described the problem with the binding of this book: it's poor. Just like another reviewer, within the first couple of weeks, the binding started to come apart, and I've been handling it carefully to keep pages from coming out, which will begin soon, I fear. And it wasn't through any rough handling on my part: I handle books like precious objects, with a lot of care and respect. The binding STILL failed very quickly.
The content is pretty good, and I'm learning a lot of advanced solving techniques, however I'm noticing that the book is a little short on examples of some of the more advanced patterns, and variations on those patterns. For example, the first end-of-chapter problem in the chapter on Forcing Chains and Grid Coloring had me totally stumped, despite the fact that I knew that one of the variations on the chapter's patterns of XY-Wing, XYZ-Wing, and Turbot Fish had to be present. Finally, I consulted sudopedia.org, and lo, they offered two subtypical examples of XY-Wing, the first of which was covered in the book, the second of which was not. I'd spent perhaps 6 hours staring at that one puzzle, and after reading of subtype two at sudopedia, I spotted the example of it in the puzzle after about 10 seconds!
Basically, I think the book could be improved by having not only solutions for the end of chapter problems, which it has, but also highlighting of the critical pattern in the candidates, at the critical juncture where the special pattern taught in that chapter must be located to enable you to finish the puzzle (without guessing), in case the reader just had too much difficulty finding it, as I did. Also more elaboration on some of the more complex patterns and how to go about searching for them would be useful.
Aside from those few shortcomings, this book is pretty good! I can't say I'm sorry I bought it. But it could be better.
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