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The Book of Kakuro #1

 
 
The Book of Kakuro #1
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The Book of Kakuro #1

Compiled by the creator of the best-selling Book of Sudoku and Sudoku To Go series, The Book of Kakuro is the hot new puzzle craze. Think of Kakuro as the mathematical equivalent of crosswords.

Kakuro books are flying off the shelves in Japan, where millions of copies have already been sold. In Britain, national newspapers that are syndicating the now-standard daily Sudoku puzzles are racing to put Kakuro puzzles alongside them. Sukodu went from an overseas puzzle phenomenon to an American popular sensation overnight, and Kakuro, already widely popular internationally, is poised to do the same.

The Book of Kakuro includes 132 puzzles ranging in difficulty from the gentle though the tough to the diabolical, tips to solving Kakuro puzzles, worksheets, and the solutions. Fans of Sudoku are nuts about the challenge of Kakuro and addicts won’t tire of Kakuro because it is so flexible. If completing a 10 x 12 cell grid becomes a breeze, simply move on to bigger grids!

Just as the Sudoku craze has begun to dominate the best-seller lists across the country, the publisher who brought you Sudoku first brings forth the next wave in the international puzzle craze, compiled and introduced by the world’s best-selling puzzle master, Michael Mepham. This time, don’t be the last on your block to join the fun!

SKU: 

2151489968

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Product Details:
Author: Michael Mepham
Paperback: 192 pages
Publisher: Overlook TP
Publication Date: December 09, 2005
Language: English
ISBN: 1585678120
Product Length: 7.52 inches
Product Width: 5.1 inches
Product Height: 0.55 inches
Product Weight: 0.28 pounds
Package Length: 7.6 inches
Package Width: 4.9 inches
Package Height: 0.6 inches
Package Weight: 0.25 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 8 reviews
 
 

Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:3.0 ( 8 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 found the following review helpful:

4Move over Sudoku  Jan 03, 2006
By Eileen Rieback
Just when you thought Sudoku was the latest puzzle to drive you crazy, along comes Kakuro, another Japanese puzzle to become the newest craze. Like Sudoku, Kakuro is really anything but new; it has been in Dell puzzle publications for years under the name "Cross Sums." No matter what you want to call it, however, it is an interesting puzzle with rules as simple as those of Sudoku and that's as maddeningly challenging.

I have two complaints with this book that knock a star off its rating. First, the difficulty ratings seem based more upon the size of the puzzle grid than upon its true difficulty. The first few puzzles in the book have a small grid, but they're not as easy as warm-up puzzles should be. Second, the book's paper is rather pulpy and it is difficult to erase your mistakes. In spite of these glitches, it's still a great way to exercise your gray cells. Try it, and watch the hours disappear.

Eileen Rieback

5 of 5 found the following review helpful:

4Agree with readers who panned this book  Sep 16, 2006
By Cary Swoveland
Yes, I agree that the quality of the paper is poor and the puzzles are all difficult, even the "Easy" ones. However, for those looking for tough puzzles, this book is very good, and outshines the other Kakuro (aka "Add 'Em Up") books I've seen. The difficulty rating really refers only to the size of the grid; i.e., the "Easy" ones have the fewest rows and columns. The techniques required to solve the puzzles are pretty much the same for all difficulty levels.

I would like to mention one technique that is required to solve many, if not most, of the puzzles in this book. That is because it does not seem to be required in other Kakuro books I've seen, and could be a stumbling block for some readers of this book. Consider any rectangular area of the puzzle. Let R be the sum of all entries in this area, when the row totals are summed. Similarly, let C be the sum of all entries when the column totals are summed. Naturally, R = C. Sometimes R can be calculated (i.e., each row total equals the given row sum less the sum of known entries in the row that are outside the given area), and C can expressed C = A - x, where A is a computed constant and x equals the unknown value of a cell that is not in the given region. It follows that x = A - R. (Obviously, the same technique can be employed when C can be computed and R can be expressed R = A - x.) Occasionally, Mepham is particularly devilish, requiring us to extend this approach to obtain an expression x = y + B (or x = B - y), where x and y represent values of two cells outside the area, and B is a computed constant. Together with other information, this may indicate the values of x and y. Clear as mud?

4 of 6 found the following review helpful:

3Typical Mike Mepham style  Feb 15, 2006
By Jeffrey L. Loeb
Just like his Sudoku books; 4 levels of difficulty - Gentle, Moderate, Tough and Diabolical.

All of the puzzles make you "use your noodle". I have yet to complete one of his puzzles, although some other Kakuros give me no difficulty solving.

One thing this book has going for it is a primer on solving Kakuro.

2 of 3 found the following review helpful:

1Don't bother  Aug 15, 2006
By Kathy "Puzzle lover"
This book is such a poor example of an edited puzzle book. Our family does daily kakuro and sudoku puzzles from the paper or other sources. The "gentle" make you think so hard that that it's NO FUN. Don't think anyone tried them before the book was published.

2Didn't enjoy it much  Dec 01, 2010
By Angel Biezeman
I read other reviews before ordering, and I wanted a bit of a challenge instead of the many Kakuro books that have puzzles so easy you hardly have to think. Like said earlier, all puzzles are hard, even the "easy" ones. One puzzle was repeated. Often there didn't seem to be a logical way to find solutions, so I got there by trail and error, and then the crappy paper (erasing) is no fun, also because some times it seemed that I had for instance found a "1" somewhere to later realize it had pressed through from the puzzle on the other side. Anyway, all in all I just didn't enjoy these puzzles very much. I like a bit harder puzzles, love the Mensa book and the Black Belt Kakuro is good too, but this one, no fun. I stumbled through it because I can't find many other Kakuro books, thinking this was better than nothing, but I can't recommend this book. New Kakuro fans skip it, experienced ones can try it if they've run out of better books.

See all 8 customer reviews on Amazon.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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