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Test your wits with a whole latte puzzles This book is filled with
classic brainteasers, featuring bite-size puzzles that will test
your wits in a variety of ways, featuring math puzzles, wordplay,
logic, lateral thinking, visual puzzles, and more! They're the
perfect accompaniment to a coffee break (or any other kind of
break), posing challenges that are quick but satisfying.
Sometimes called `imponderables' or `rhetoricals', they do not
necessarily have answers. These silly questions are always amusing
and often interesting because they concern the little unnoticed
contradictions in life. Why do we write things down but type them
up? Why do ships carry a cargo, while cars carry a shipment? And
how did the guy who made the first clock know what time to set it
to? This is philosophy for the man and woman in the street, but
stuff the real philosophers are not able to answer. Our response
can vary from `Yes, I've often wondered about that', through `How
the hell should I know?' to `Who cares? This is the biggest
collection of sillies ever assembled, and by the time you have
finished reading them, you will begin to spot new questions for
yourself, so it is a game anyone can learn and play. Have fun
reading them using them to confuse and amuse others --- teachers,
students ,parents, spouses, bosses, employees, and anyone you want
to take down a peg.
This fun book of puzzles is specially created for kids by Des
MacHale. There are several of each type of puzzle, of varying
difficulty. From quick puzzles that will take a couple of minutes
to logic problems that will need hours of work, each puzzle is
graded into levels of difficulty. "Puzzleology" includes picture
puzzles, mazes, math tests, lateral thinking, visual reasoning
puzzles, plus spatial problems with solutions at the back. Just how
tough and smart are you?
John Ford’s The Quiet Man (1952) is the most popular cinematic
representation of Ireland, and one of Hollywood's classic romantic
comedies. For some viewers and critics the film is a powerful
evocation of romantic Ireland and the search for home. This book
contains new and original information and photographs about the
film The Quiet Man. Des MacHale has found a range of unexpected new
information about the film. The book opens with the letters of John
Ford’s secretary, Meta Sterne, giving authentic information and
commentary about what went on behind the scenes on location in
Ireland. There were many rumours of a sequel to The Quiet Man but
they never came off. However, a belated sequel Only the Lonely
starring Maureen O’Hara was produced in 1991 and it is described
and analysed. The emergence of the screenplay of The Quiet Man is a
long and complicated saga. The book examines the initial rejected
screenplay by the Welsh novelist Richard Llewellyn which contained
much of the inspiration for the final cut of the movie. The memoirs
of Maureen Coyne—Cashman, who lives in Brooklyn, New York, are
published here for the first time. She is one of the few surviving
bit players and she describes her experiences on set with Wayne,
O’Hara, and Ford. The real-life incidents on which the ecumenical
scenes in the film are based are discussed. The final part of the
book covers more recent events including the Quiet Man conference
held in Galway in 2004 and the opening of Pat Cohan’s bar in 2008
which featured in the film as a real bar. The book also contains
dozens of previously unseen stills from the movie and many unseen
photographs of locations and personalities.
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