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How to win games and beat people :Defeat and demolish your family and friends!

How to win games and beat people

How to win games and beat people :Defeat and demolish your family and friends!

(Author)
paperback
Published: 1 August, 2019
Standard worldwide delivery by Thu, July 23 - Tue, July 28
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Condition: USED
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Description

Are you fed up losing at family board game nights? Do you want to learn how to destroy the competition?

Get the inside tips from preposterously overqualified experts on how to win a range of common family games, board games and more.

* A mime artist tells you how to do the best charades
* A mathematician tells you how to win Connect 4
* A professional racing driver tells you how to take corners in Scalextric
* A Scrabble champion reveals his secrets
* A game theorist tells you what properties to buy in Monopoly in order to bankrupt and embarrass your competitors.

This is a must read for anyone who takes games too seriously and for bad losers everywhere.

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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9780753554739
ISBN10 0753554739
Number Of Pages 192
Item Weight 107 g
Product Dimensions 13 x 111 x 4 mm
Publisher / Reseller Ebury Publishing
Format paperback
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Media Reviews

“It sounds utterly brilliant” -- Editor's Choice * The Bookseller *
This book is fantastic! * Steve Wright, BBC Radio 2 *
Tom Whipple’s little red book is the tome to tuck into your weekend bag if you know you’re going be Monopolised or Scrabbled * Harpers Baazar *

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GoodReads Reviews

Author's Bio

Tom Whipple is the science editor at The Times. He covers everything from archaeology to zoology. He writes news, features, reviews and commentary across the paper, as well as appearing regularly on Times Radio. He joined the paper in 2006, shortly after graduating with a degree in mathematics.
During the course of his job he has visited the tunnels below Cern and the top of Mont Blanc above it. He has seen the inside of the world's hottest sauna and the world's most irradiated nature reserve. He has interviewed Stephen Hawking and Jedward. He has been arrested in three different countries.
As well as The Times, he has written for the Guardian and The Economist. He was named science journalist of the year for his coverage of the Covid-19 pandemic.

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