The FictionMags Index
Index by Name: Page 1197
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[]Gardner, Hy (fl. 1940s-1950s) (chron.)
- * “Believe Me, I’m Convinced”, (cl) Parade April 19 1953 [Ref. Bob Hope]
- * Blinky’s Boner, (vi) 1954, as "The Case of the Careless Counterfeiter"
- * The Case of the Careless Counterfeiter, (vi) 1954
- * The Case of the Toothless Swindler, (vi) 1959
- * Hy Gardner Featurette: Who’s Dumb?, (cl) Parade February 1 1953
- * The Mumbling Man, (vi) 1959, as "The Case of the Toothless Swindler"
- * Nite Spots:
* ___ Swank Goes Places, (cl) Swank January 1942
- * Swank Goes Places, (ar) Swank January 1942
[]Gardner, James Alan (1955?- ) (about) (books) (chron.)
- * About “Three Hearings on the Existence of Snakes in the Human Bloodstream”, (ms) The Bulletin of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America #138, Summer 1998
- * An Absurd Diet, (ss) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * Album d’ombres, (ss) Solaris #165, December 2007; “Shadow Album”, Amazing Stories, July 1991, translator unknown.
- * All the Cool Monsters at Once, (ss) Mythspring ed. Julie E. Czerneda & Genevieve Kierans, Red Deer Press, 2006
- * Ars Longa, Vita Brevis, (vi) Nature #6809, November 9 2000
- * Axial Axioms, (ss) ReVisions ed. Julie E. Czerneda & Isaac Szpindel, DAW, 2004
- * The Bullet, (ss) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * Bunny, Bunny: a Double Story, (ss) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * Changeable Market in Slaves, (ss)
- * The Children of Crèche, (nv) L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume VI ed. Algis Budrys, Bridge, 1990
- * A Clean Sweep with All the Trimmings, (nv) Tor.com December 14 2011
- * Dense of Wonder, (vi) Amazing Stories Summer 1998
- * The Dog and the Sleepwalker, (ss) Strangers Among Us ed. Susan Forest & Lucas K. Law, Laksa Media, 2016
- * The Fat Man and Fat Woman, (ss) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * General Eisenhower, (??) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * George Washington, (??) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * Gravity Wells, (co) HarperCollins/Eos (tp), May 2005
- * Hardware Scenario G-49, (ss) Amazing Stories December 1991
- * How We Try So Hard to Lose Weight, (ss) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * Introduction, (in) Iterations by Robert J. Sawyer, Quarry Press/Out of this World, 2002
- * I Remember Paris, (ss) Shapers of Worlds: Volume II ed. Edward Willett, Shadowpaw Press, 2021
- * Kent State Descending the Gravity Well, (ss) Amazing Stories October 1992
- * The Last Day of the War, with Parrots, (nv) Amazing Stories Winter 1995
- * Lesser Figures of the Greater Trumps, (ss)
- * A Man Carrying a Woman’s Head, (ss) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * Muffin Explains Teleology to the World at Large, (ss) On Spec Spring 1990
- Tesseracts3 ed. Candas Jane Dorsey & Gerry Truscott, Porcepic, 1990
- The Best of the Rest 1990 ed. Steve Pasechnick & Brian Youmans, Edgewood Press, 1991
- On Spec: The First Five Years ed. The ON SPEC Editorial Collective, Tesseract, 1995
- What If…? Amazing Stories ed. Monica Hughes, Tundra Books, 1998
- Gravity Wells, Eos, 2005
- * The Mutants Men Don’t See, (ss) Asimov’s Science Fiction August 2016
- * The One with the Interstellar Group Consciousnesses, (ss) Federations ed. John Joseph Adams, Prime Books, 2009
- * On “The Ray-Gun: A Love Story”, (ms) The Bulletin of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America #182, April/May 2009
- * Rain, Ice, Steam, (ss) Explorer ed. Julie E. Czerneda, Trifolium Books, 2002
- * The Ray-Gun: A Love Story, (nv) Asimov’s Science Fiction February 2008
- * Reaper, (ss) The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction February 1991
- * The Reckoning of Gifts, (nv) Tesseracts4 ed. Lorna Toolis & Michael Skeet, Porcepic, 1992
- * Sense of Wonder, (aw) Gravity Wells, Eos, 2005
- * Shadow Album, (ss) Amazing Stories July 1991
- * Shopping at the Mall, (ss) Future Washington ed. Ernest Lilley, WSFA, 2005
- * A Sketch of the Life of Daniil Kharms, (ss) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * Solitaire for Three, (ss) Game On! ed. Stephen Kotowych & Tony Pi, Zombies Need Brains, 2023
- * The Spy Who Remembered Me, (ss) License Expired: The Unauthorized James Bond ed. Madeline Ashby & David Nickle, ChiZine Publications, 2015
- * The Tempting: A Love Story, (ss) Electric Velocipede #26, 2013
- * Three Damnations: A Fugue, (nv) Fantasy Magazine (online) #54, September 2011
- * Three Hearings on the Existence of Snakes in the Human Bloodstream, (nv) Asimov’s Science Fiction February 1997
- * The Trapped Man, (ss) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * Truth-Poison, (ss) Campus Chills ed. Mark Leslie, Stark Publishing, 2009
- * The Two Story Package, (ss) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * UFOs, (??) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * Weber, (pm) Noir Nation #7, April 2019
- * What Is Absurdism?, (ar) Bust Down the Door and Eat All the Chickens #1, 2003
- * Withered Gold, the Night, the Day, (ss)
- * The Young Person’s Guide to the Organism, (na) Amazing Stories April 1992
_____, ed.
_____, [ref.]
- * Commitment Hour by Greg Beatty, (br) The New York Review of Science Fiction #128, April 1999
- * Expendable by Michael M. Levy, (br) The New York Review of Science Fiction #114, February 1998
- * Gravity Wells by Niall Harrison, (br) Interzone #201, December 2005
- * Hunted by Chris Gilmore, (br) Interzone #158, August 2000
- * Interview: James Alan Gardner, (iv) Deep Magic #26, July 2004, uncredited.
- * James Alan Gardner by Leigh Ronald Grossman, (ar) Sense of Wonder ed. Leigh Ronald Grossman, Wildside Press, 2011
- * James Alan Gardner, (bg) The Bulletin of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America #182, April/May 2009, uncredited.
- * James Alan Gardner Explains Himself to the World at Large by James Schellenberg & David M. Switzer, (iv) Challenging Destiny #3, July 1998
- * Q&A: James Alan Gardner by Edo van Belkom, (iv) Parsec Spring 1998
[]Gardner, Jen (fl. 2020s) (chron.)
- * The Birth of a Monster, (pm) The Sirens Call #58, Summer 2022
- * The Feeling, (vi) The Sirens Call #57, Spring 2022
- * The Garden Eternal, (pm) The Sirens Call #58, Summer 2022
- * Not Your Ghost, (pm) The Sirens Call #57, Spring 2022
- * A Prayer for the Graveyard Girl, (pm) The Sirens Call #57, Spring 2022
- * Where Does the Beast Go?, (pm) The Sirens Call #58, Summer 2022
[]Gardner, John (Edmund) (1926-2007) (about) (chron.)
- * The Elopement, (ss) Penthouse (UK) October/November 1966
- * A Handful of Rice [Boysie Oakes], (ss) Penthouse (UK) March 1968
- * The Head of the Family, (ar) The Daily Telegraph November 29 1974
- * I Have, (ss) Hideaway by John Gardner, Corgi, 1968
- * License Renewed [James Bond], (n.) Jonathan Cape, 1981
- * License Renewed [James Bond], (ex) Jonathan Cape, 1981
- * The Loving You Get, (ss) Murder for Love ed. Otto Penzler, Delacorte, 1996
- * Moriarty and the Real Underworld, (ar) 1976
- * Smiley at the Circus: Cold War Espionage, (ar) Murder Ink: The Mystery Reader’s Companion ed. Dilys Winn, Workman Publishing, 1977 [Ref. John le Carré]
- * The Stay-Behinds, (ss) The Armchair Detective Winter 1991
_____, [ref.]
[]Gardner, John (Champlin, Jr.) (1933-1982) (about) (books) (chron.)
- * The Art of Living, (nv)
- * The Champ They Love to Hate (Kid Gavilan), (ar) The Saturday Evening Post March 20 1954
- * Come on Back, (ss) The Atlantic Monthly March 1981
- * Dragon, Dragon, (ss) The Dragon, Dragon and Other Tales by John Gardner, Knopf, 1975
- * Foreword, (fw) German Literary Tales ed. Frank G. Ryder & Robert M. Browning, Continuum, 1983
- * Form in Its Relationship to Meaning (with Lennis Dunlap), (ar)
- * Forward (with Lennis Dunlap), (fw) The Forms of Fiction ed. John Gardner & Lennis Dunlap, Random House, 1962
- * Introduction, (in) The Best American Short Stories 1982 ed. John Gardner & Shannon Ravenel, Houghton Mifflin, 1982
- * Introduction: Reading Fiction (with Lennis Dunlap), (in) The Forms of Fiction ed. John Gardner & Lennis Dunlap, Random House, 1962
- * Julius Caesar and the Werewolf, (ss) Playboy September 1984
- * The Modern Writer’s Use of the Sketch, Fable, Yarn, and Tale (with Lennis Dunlap), (ar)
- * The Music Lover, (ss) Antæus #13/14, Spring/Summer 1974
- * Nickel Mountain, (na) Redbook November 1973
- * The Pear Tree, (ss) The Saturday Evening Post October 1976
- * Queen Louisa, (ss) The King’s Indian by John Gardner, Random House, 1974
- * The Ravages of Spring, (nv) Fantastic Stories April 1973
- * Redemption, (ss) The Atlantic Monthly 1977
- * Short Fiction for Study (with Lennis Dunlap), (ar)
- * The Song of Grendel, (ss) Esquire October 1971
- * The Temptation of St. Ivo, (ss) Esquire July 1972
- * The Things, (ss) Perspective Winter 1972
- * Trumpeter, (ss) Esquire December 1976
- * The Warden, (nv) TriQuarterly #29, Winter 1974
_____, ed.
_____, [ref.]
- * Freddy’s Book by Darrell Schweitzer, (br) Science Fiction Review #38, Spring 1981
- * Freddy’s Book and Vlemk the Box-Painter by Ursula K. Le Guin, (br) The Washington Post Book World March 23 1980
- * Grendel by Dan Simmons, (ar) Horror: 100 Best Books ed. Stephen Jones & Kim Newman, Xanadu, 1988
- * Grendel by Don Ashby, (br) SF Commentary #48/49/50, October/November/December 1976
- * Mickelsson’s Ghosts by Donald M. Hassler, (br) Foundation #27, February 1983
- * On Art, Morals, and Morality by Orson Scott Card, (ar) A Storyteller in Zion by Orson Scott Card, Bookcraft, 1993
[]Gardner, Lisa; pseudonym of Lisa Baumgartner (1971- ) (chron.)
- * Catch Me, (ex) Dutton, 2012
- * Conquering the Dreaded Synopsis:
* ___ Lecture One: The Market, (cl) Suspense Magazine February 2013
* ___ Lecture Two: The Query Letter, (cl) Suspense Magazine March 2013
* ___ Lecture Three: Synopsis Overview, (cl) Suspense Magazine April 2013
* ___ Lecture Four: Short Synopsis Examples, (cl) Suspense Magazine May 2013
* ___ Lecture Five: Creating a Strong Hook, (cl) Suspense Magazine June 2013
* ___ Lecture Six: Identifying Plot Points, (cl) Suspense Magazine July 2013
* ___ Lecture Seven: Short Synopsis Outlines, (cl) Suspense Magazine August 2013
* ___ Lecture Eight: The Long Synopsis, (cl) Suspense Magazine September/October 2013
* ___ Lecture Nine: Full Submission, (cl) Suspense Magazine November 2013
* ___ Lecture Ten: Final Summary of Submission Do’s and Don’ts, (cl) Suspense Magazine December 2013
- * Crash & Burn, (ex) Dutton, 2015
- * Creating a Strong Hook, (ar) Suspense Magazine June 2013
- * Final Summary of Submission Do’s and Don’ts, (ar) Suspense Magazine December 2013
- * Full Submission, (ar) Suspense Magazine November 2013
- * Identifying Plot Points, (ar) Suspense Magazine July 2013
- * The Laughing Buddha [Malachai Samuels; D. D. Warren] (with Melisse J. Shapiro), (nv) FaceOff ed. David Baldacci, Simon & Schuster, 2014, as by Lisa Gardner & M. J. Rose
- * The Long Synopsis, (ar) Suspense Magazine September/October 2013
- * The Market, (ar) Suspense Magazine February 2013
- * The Query Letter, (ar) Suspense Magazine March 2013
- * Short Synopsis Examples, (ar) Suspense Magazine May 2013
- * Short Synopsis Outlines, (ar) Suspense Magazine August 2013
- * Synopsis Overview, (ar) Suspense Magazine April 2013
- * Tips for Writing Success, (ar) The Strand Magazine #54, February/May 2018
- * Touch & Go, (ex) Suspense Magazine January 2013; to be published by Dutton in February 2013.
_____, [ref.]
[]Gardner, Martin (1914-2010); used pseudonyms George Groth & Rendrag Nitram (about) (books) (chron.)
- * 1984, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine December 1983
- * The Abacus, (ar) Scientific American January 1970, as "The Abacus: Primitive but Effective Digital Computer"
- * The Abacus: Primitive but Effective Digital Computer, (ar) Scientific American January 1970
- * About Henry Ernest Dudeney, a Brilliant Creator of Puzzles, (ar) Scientific American June 1958
- * About Left- and Right-Handedness, Mirror Images and Kindred Matters, (ar) Scientific American March 1958
- * About Mathematical Games That Are Played on Boards, (ar) Scientific American April 1960
- * About Mazes and How They Can Be Traversed, (ar) Scientific American January 1959
- * About Origami, the Japanese Art of Folding Objects out of Paper, (ar) Scientific American July 1959
- * About phi, an Irrational Number That Has Some Remarkable Geometrical Expressions, (ar) Scientific American August 1959
- * About Rectangling Rectangles, Parodying Poe and Many Another Pleasing Problem, (ar) Scientific American February 1979
- * About Tetraflexagons and Tetraflexagation, (ar) Scientific American May 1958
- * About the Remarkable Similarity Between the Icosian Game and the Tower of Hanoi, (ar) Scientific American May 1957
- * About Three Types of Spirals and How to Construct Them, (ar) Scientific American April 1962
- * About Two New and Two Old Mathematical Board Games, (ar) Scientific American October 1963
- * The Abstract Parabola Fits the Concrete World, (ar) Scientific American August 1981
- * An Adventure in Hyperspace at the Church of the Fourth Dimension, (ar) Scientific American January 1962
- * Advertising Premiums, (ar) Scientific American November 1971, as "Advertising Premiums to Beguile the Mind: Classics by Sam Loyd, Master Puzzle-Poser"
- * Advertising Premiums to Beguile the Mind: Classics by Sam Loyd, Master Puzzle-Poser, (ar) Scientific American November 1971
- * Again, How’s That Again?, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine February 1986
- * Aleph-Null and Aleph-One, (ar) Scientific American March 1966, as "The Hierarchy of Infinities and the Problems It Spawns"
- * Alephs and Supertasks, (ar) Scientific American March 1971, as "The Orders of Infinity, the Topological Nature of Dimension and “Supertasks”"
- * Alice in Beeland, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine March 1986
- * The Amazing Feats of Professional Mental Calculators, and Some Tricks of the Trade, (ar) Scientific American April 1967
- * Amazing Mathematical Card Tricks That Do Not Require Prestidigitation, (ar) Scientific American July 1972
- * The Anagram Game:
* ___ Ettarre an Anagram?, (cl) Kalki #7, 1968 [Ref. James Branch Cabell]
* ___ More About Mother, and Elsewhere, (cl) Kalki #5, 1967
- * Anamorphic Art, (ar) Scientific American January 1975, as "The Curious Magic of Anamorphic Art"
- * And He Built Another Crooked House, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine November 1982
- * Animal TTT, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine June 1985
- * Another Collection of “Brain-Teasers”, (ar) Scientific American May 1959
- * Antimagic at the Number Wall, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine September 28 1981
- * Antimatter, (vi) The Ambidexterous Universe by Martin Gardner, Basic Books, 1964
- * Around the Solar System, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine August 1984
- * An Array of Problems That Can Be Solved with Elementary Mathematical Techniques, (ar) Scientific American March 1967
- * An Array of Puzzles and Tricks, with a Few Traps for the Unwary, (ar) Scientific American August 1968
- * The Art of M. C. Escher, (ar) Scientific American April 1966, as "The Eerie Mathematical Art of Maurits C. Escher"
- * The Arts As Combinatorial Mathematics, or How to Compose Like Mozart with Dice, (ar) Scientific American December 1974
- * An Assortment of Maddening Puzzles, (ar) Scientific American February 1957
- * An Astounding Self-Test of Clairvoyance by Dr. Matrix, (ar) Scientific American August 1973
- * At the Feet of Karl Klodhopper, (ss) Esquire May 1948, as "Dr. Clodhopper’s Footsies"
- * The Author Pays His Annual Visit to Dr. Matrix, the Numerologist, (ar) Scientific American January 1963
- * Back from the Klondike and Other Problems, (ar) Scientific American October 1976, as "Combinatorial Problems, Some Old, Some New and All Newly Attacked by Computer"
- * The Backward Banana, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine July 1980
- * Backward Run Numbers, Letters, Words and Sentences Until Boggles the Mind, (ar) Scientific American August 1970
- * Bacon’s Cipher, (ar) Scientific American November 1972, as "On the Practical Uses and Bizarre Abuses of Sir Francis Bacon’s Biliteral Cipher"
- * The Bagel Heads Home, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine January 19 1981
- * The Balls of Aleph-Null Inn, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine August 3 1981
- * The Barbers of Barberpolia, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine December 1984
- * Bar Bets on the Bagel, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine April 1985
- * The Beauties of the Square, As Expounded by Dr. Matrix to Rehabilitate the Hippie, (ar) Scientific American January 1968
- * The Bells: Versatile Numbers That Can Count Partitions of a Set, Primes and Even Rhymes, (ar) Scientific American May 1978
- * Beyond Cultural Relativism, (ar) Ethics October 1950
- * The Binary Gray Code, (ar) Scientific American August 1972, as "The Curious Properties of the Gray Code and How It Can Be Used to Solve Puzzles"
- * The Binary System, (ar) Scientific American December 1960, as "Some Recreations Involving the Binary Number System"
- * A Bit of Foolishness for April Fools’ Day, (ar) Scientific American April 1963
- * Blabbage’s Decision Paradox, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine November 1980, as "G. Hovah’s Decision Paradox"
- * The Black Hole of Cal Cutter, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine October 1984
- * Block Packing, (ar) Scientific American February 1976, as "Some Elegant Brick-Packing Problems, and a New Order-7 Perfect Magic Cube"
- * The Blue Birthmark, (vi) Hence July 1948
- * Blues in the Night, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine January 1986
- * Board Games, (ar) Scientific American April 1960, as "About Mathematical Games That Are Played on Boards"
- * Boolean Algebra, (ar) Scientific American February 1969, as "Boolean Algebra, Venn Diagrams and the Propositional Calculus"
- * Boolean Algebra, Venn Diagrams and the Propositional Calculus, (ar) Scientific American February 1969
- * Bouncing Balls in Polygons and Polyhedrons, (ar) Scientific American September 1963, as "How to Solve Puzzles by Graphing the Rebounds of a Bouncing Ball"
- * Bouncing Superballs, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine April 1983
- * “Brain-Teasers” That Involve Formal Logic, (ar) Scientific American February 1959
- * A Breakthrough in Magic Squares, and the First Perfect Magic Cube, (ar) Scientific American January 1976
- * Bridg-It and Other Games, (ar) Scientific American July 1961, as "Some Diverting Mathematical Board Games"
- * Bulgarian Solitaire and Other Seemingly Endless Tasks, (ar) Scientific American August 1983, as "Tasks You Cannot Help Finishing No Matter How Hard You Try to Block Finishing Them"
- * Bull’s Eyes and Pratfalls, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine December 1985
- * Calculating Prodigies, (ar) Scientific American April 1967, as "The Amazing Feats of Professional Mental Calculators, and Some Tricks of the Trade"
- * The Calculating Rods of John Napier, the Eccentric Father of the Logarithm, (ar) Scientific American March 1973
- * The Calculus of Finite Differences, (ar) Scientific American August 1961, as "Some Entertainments That Involve the Calculus of Finite Differences"
- * Can Machines Think?, (ar) Scientific American June 1971, as "The Turing Game and the Question It Presents: Can a Computer Think?"
- * Can the Shuffling of Cards (And Other Apparently Random Events) Be Reversed?, (ar) Scientific American October 1966
- * Can Time Stop? The Past Change?, (ar) Scientific American March 1979
- * Captain Tittlebaum’s Test, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine February 1979
- * The Capture of the Monster: a Mathematical Group with a Ridiculous Number of Elements, (ar) Scientific American June 1980
- * Card Shuffles, (ar) Scientific American October 1966, as "Can the Shuffling of Cards (And Other Apparently Random Events) Be Reversed?"
- * The Case of the Defective Doyles, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine January/February 1978
- * Casting a Net on a Checkerboard and Other Puzzles of the Forest , (ar) Scientific American June 1986
- * The Castrati of Womensa, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine mid December 1983
- * Catalan Numbers, (ar) Scientific American June 1976, as "Catalan Numbers: an Integer Sequence That Materializes in Unexpected Places"
- * Catalan Numbers: an Integer Sequence That Materializes in Unexpected Places, (ar) Scientific American June 1976
- * Catch the BEM, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine May 1985
- * The Caterpillar who Tried to Fly, (ss) Humpty Dumpty’s Magazine for Little Children #246, March 1977
- * The Celebrated Four-Color Map Problem of Topology, (ar) Scientific American September 1960
- * Chaitin’s Omega, (ar) Scientific American November 1979, as "The Random Number Omega Bids Fair to Hold the Mysteries of the Universe"
- * Challenging Chess Tasks for Puzzle Buffs and Answers to the Recreational Problems, (ar) Scientific American May 1972
- * Charles Addams’ Skier and Other Problems, (ar) Scientific American April 1972, as "A Topological Problem with a Fresh Twist, and Eight Other New Recreational Puzzles"
- * Charles Sanders Peirce, (ar) Scientific American July 1978, as "On Charles Sanders Peirce: Philosopher and Gamesman"
- * Checker Recreations, (ar) Scientific American January 1980, as "Checkers, a Game That Can Be More Interesting Than One Might Think"
- * Checkers, a Game That Can Be More Interesting Than One Might Think, (ar) Scientific American January 1980
- * Chess by Ray and Smull, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine March 16 1981
- * Chess Problems on a Higher Plane, Including Mirror Images, Rotations and the Superqueen, (ar) Scientific American June 1979
- * Chess Tasks, (ar) Scientific American May 1972, as "Challenging Chess Tasks for Puzzle Buffs and Answers to the Recreational Problems"
- * Chicago Magic Convention, (ar) Scientific American August 1962, as "A Variety of Diverting Tricks Collected at a Fictitious Convention of Magicians"
- * The Church of the Fourth Dimension, (ar) Scientific American January 1962, as "An Adventure in Hyperspace at the Church of the Fourth Dimension"
- * Circles and Spheres, and How They Kiss and Pack, (ar) Scientific American May 1968
- * Close Encounters of the Third Kind, (mr) The New York Review of Books January 26 1978
- * A Clutch of Diverting Problems, (ar) Scientific American February 1962
- * The Cocktail Cherry and Other Problems, (ar) Scientific American November 1967, as "A Mixed Bag of Logical and Illogical Problems to Solve"
- * Coincidence, (ar) Scientific American October 1972, as "Why the Long Arm of Coincidence Is Usually Not As Long As It Seems"
- * Coleridge and “The Ancient Mariner”, (ar) The Annotated Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Clarkson Potter, 1965
- * Coleridge’s Apples and Eight Other Problems, (ar) Scientific American March 1965, as "A New Group of Short Problems"
- * A Collection of Puzzles Involving Numbers, Logic, and Probability, (ar) Scientific American October 1962
- * A Collection of Short Problems and More Talk of Prime Numbers, (ar) Scientific American June 1964
- * A Collection of Tantalizing Fallacies of Mathematics, (ar) Scientific American January 1958
- * Colored Triangles and Cubes, (ar) Scientific American October 1968, as "Macmahon’s Color Triangles and the Joys of Fitting Them Together"
- * The Coloring of Unusual Maps Leads Into Uncharted Territory, (ar) Scientific American February 1980
- * The Combinatorial Basis of the “I Ching,” the Chinese Book of Divination and Wisdom, (ar) Scientific American January 1974
- * Combinatorial Card Problems, (ar) Scientific American November 1974, as "Some New and Dramatic Demonstrations of Number Theorems with Playing Cards"
- * Combinatorial Possibilities in a Pack of Shuffled Cards, (ar) Scientific American June 1968
- * Combinatorial Problems Involving Tree Graphs and Forests of Trees, (ar) Scientific American February 1968
- * Combinatorial Problems, Some Old, Some New and All Newly Attacked by Computer, (ar) Scientific American October 1976
- * The Combinatorial Richness of Folding a Piece of Paper, (ar) Scientific American May 1971
- * Combinatorial Theory, (ar) Scientific American August 1963, as "Permutations and Paradoxes in Combinatorial Mathematics"
- * The Combinatorics of Paper Folding, (ar) Scientific American May 1971, as "The Combinatorial Richness of Folding a Piece of Paper"
- * Commentary, (ms) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine December 1982
- * The Computer as Scientist, (ar) Discover June 1983
- * Computers Near the Threshold?, (ar) Mysteries of Life and the Universe ed. William H. Shore, Harcourt Brace, 1992
- * The Concept of Negative Numbers and the Difficulty of Grasping It, (ar) Scientific American June 1977
- * Concerning Mechanical Puzzles, and How an Enthusiast Has Collected 2,000 of Them, (ar) Scientific American September 1959
- * Concerning Several Magic Tricks Based on Mathematical Principles, (ar) Scientific American August 1964
- * Concerning the Celebrated Puzzle of Five Sailors, a Monkey and a Pile of Coconuts, (ar) Scientific American April 1958
- * Concerning the Diversions in a New Book on Geometry, (ar) Scientific American April 1961
- * Concerning the Game of Hex, Which May Be Played on the Tiles of the Bathroom Floor, (ar) Scientific American July 1957
- * Concerning the Game of Nim and Its Mathematical Analysis, (ar) Scientific American February 1958
- * Concerning the Properties of Various Magic Squares, (ar) Scientific American March 1959
- * Concerning Various Card Tricks with a Mathematical Message, (ar) Scientific American September 1957
- * The Conspicuous Turtle [Monte Featherstone], (ss) Esquire April 1947
- * Conway’s Surreal Numbers, (ar) Scientific American September 1976, as "John Horton Conway’s Book Covers an Infinity of Games"
- * Cooks and Quibble-Cooks, (ar) Scientific American May 1966, as "How to Cook a Puzzle, or Mathematical One-Uppery"
- * Cornering a Queen Leads Unexpectedly Into Corners of the Theory of Numbers, (ar) Scientific American March 1977
- * Count Dracula, Alice, Portia and Many Others Consider Various Twists of Logic, (ar) Scientific American March 1978
- * Counting Systems and the Relationship Between Numbers and the Real World, (ar) Scientific American September 1968
- * Cracker’s Parallel World, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine May 11 1981
- * Cram, Bynum and Quadraphage, (ar) Scientific American February 1974, as "Cram, Crosscram and Quadraphage: New Games Having Elusive Winning Strategies"
- * Cram, Crosscram and Quadraphage: New Games Having Elusive Winning Strategies, (ar) Scientific American February 1974
- * Crossing Numbers, (ar) Scientific American June 1973, as "Plotting the Crossing Number of Graphs"
- * Crossing Numbers on Phoebe, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine March 15 1982
- * Crunchy Wunchy’s First Case, (ss) The London Mystery Magazine #8, February/March 1951
- * The Császár Polyhedron, (ar) Scientific American May 1975, as "On the Remarkable Császár Polyhedron and Its Applications in Problem Solving"
- * Cube-Root Extraction and the Calendar Trick, or How to Cheat in Mathematics, (ar) Scientific American May 1967
- * Curious Figures Descended from the Möbius Band, Which Has Only One Side and One Edge, (ar) Scientific American June 1957
- * The Curious Magic of Anamorphic Art, (ar) Scientific American January 1975
- * Curious Maps, (ar) Scientific American November 1975, as "On Map Projections (With Special Reference to Some Inspired Ones)"
- * The Curious Mind of Allan Bloom, (br) Education and Society Spring 1988
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- * The Demon and the Pentagram, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine February 1983
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- * Diophantine Analysis and the Problem of Fermat’s Legendary Last Theorem, (ar) Scientific American July 1970
- * Dirac’s Scissors, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine November 1985
- * Directed Graphs and Cannibals, (ar) Scientific American March 1980, as "Graphs That Can Help Cannibals, Missionaries, Wolves, Goats and Cabbages Get There from Here"
- * A Discussion of Helical Structures, from Corkscrews to Dna Molecules, (ar) Scientific American June 1963
- * The Diverse Pleasures of Circles That Are Tangent to One Another, (ar) Scientific American January 1979
- * Diversions That Clarify Group Theory, Particularly by the Weaving of Braids, (ar) Scientific American December 1959
- * Diversions That Involve One of the Classic Conic Sections: the Ellipse, (ar) Scientific American February 1961
- * Diversions That Involve the Mathematical Constant “e”, (ar) Scientific American October 1961
- * Diversions Which Involve the Five Platonic Solids, (ar) Scientific American December 1958
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- * Dr. Matrix (Calcutta), (ar) Scientific American November 1976, as "In Which Dm (Dr. Matrix) Is Revealed As the Guru of Pm (Pentagonal Meditation)"
- * Dr. Matrix (Chautauqua), (ar) Scientific American December 1978, as "Is It a Superintelligent Robot or Does Dr. Matrix Ride Again?"
- * Dr. Matrix (Chicago), (ar) Scientific American January 1964, as "Presenting the One and Only Dr. Matrix, Numerologist, in His Annual Performance"
- * Dr. Matrix (Clairvoyance Test), (ar) Scientific American August 1973, as "An Astounding Self-Test of Clairvoyance by Dr. Matrix"
- * Dr. Matrix Delivers a Talk on Acrostics, (ar) Scientific American January 1967
- * Dr. Matrix (Fifth Avenue), (ar) Scientific American January 1969, as "Dr. Matrix Gives His Explanation of Why Mr. Nixon Was Elected President"
- * Dr. Matrix Finds Numerological Wonders in the King James Bible, (ar) Scientific American September 1975
- * Dr. Matrix Gives His Explanation of Why Mr. Nixon Was Elected President, (ar) Scientific American January 1969
- * Dr. Matrix Goes to California to Apply Punk to Rock Study, (ar) Scientific American December 1977
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- * Dr. Matrix (Houston), (ar) Scientific American February 1972, as "Dr. Matrix Poses Some Heteroliteral Puzzles While Peddling Perpetual Motion in Houston"
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- * Dr. Matrix (Los Angeles), (ar) Scientific American January 1961, as "In Which the Author Chats Again with Dr. Matrix, Numerologist Extraordinary"
- * Dr. Matrix (Miami Beach), (ar) Scientific American January 1965, as "Some Comments by Dr. Matrix on Symmetries and Reversals"
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- * Dr. Matrix (Pyramid Lake), (ar) Scientific American June 1974, as "Dr. Matrix Brings His Numerological Science to Bear on the Occult Powers of the Pyramid"
- * Dr. Matrix Returns, Now in the Guise of a Neo-Freudian Psychonumeranalyst, (ar) Scientific American January 1966
- * Dr. Matrix (Sing Sing), (ar) Scientific American January 1963, as "The Author Pays His Annual Visit to Dr. Matrix, the Numerologist"
- * Dr. Matrix (Squaresville), (ar) Scientific American January 1968, as "The Beauties of the Square, As Expounded by Dr. Matrix to Rehabilitate the Hippie"
- * Dr. Matrix (Stanford), (ar) Scientific American December 1977, as "Dr. Matrix Goes to California to Apply Punk to Rock Study"
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- * Dr. Matrix (The Moon), (ar) Scientific American October 1969, as "A Numeranalysis by Dr. Matrix of the Lunar Flight of Apollo 11"
- * Dr. Matrix (Wordsmith College), (ar) Scientific American January 1967, as "Dr. Matrix Delivers a Talk on Acrostics"
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- * The Doctors’ Dilemma, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine Spring 1977
- * Dodgem and Other Simple Games, (ar) Scientific American June 1975, as "Games of Strategy for Two Players: Star Nim, Meander, Dodgem and Rex"
- * Does Time Ever Stop? Can the Past Be Altered?, (ar) Scientific American March 1979, as "On Altering the Past, Delaying the Future and Other Ways of Tampering with Time"
- * Dollar Bills, (ar) Scientific American April 1968, as "Puzzles and Tricks with a Dollar Bill"
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- * Dominoes, (ar) Scientific American December 1969, as "A Handful of Combinatorial Problems Based on Dominoes"
- * Double Acrostics, (ar) Scientific American September 1967, as "Double Acrostics, Stylized Victorian Ancestors of Today’s Crossword Puzzle"
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- * Doughnuts: Linked and Knotted, (ar) Scientific American December 1972, as "Knotty Problems with a Two-Hole Torus"
- * Douglas Hofstadter’s Gödel, Escher, Bach, (ar) Scientific American July 1979, as "Douglas R. Hofstadter’s “Gödel, Escher, Bach”"
- * Douglas R. Hofstadter’s “Gödel, Escher, Bach”, (ar) Scientific American July 1979
- * Dracula Makes a Martini, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine September 1979
- * The Dragon Curve and Other Problems, (ar) Scientific American March 1967, as "An Array of Problems That Can Be Solved with Elementary Mathematical Techniques"
- * The Dybbuk and the Hexagram, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine November 1983
- * Eccentric Chess and Other Problems, (ar) Scientific American February 1970, as "Nine New Puzzles to Solve"
- * The Eerie Mathematical Art of Maurits C. Escher, (ar) Scientific American April 1966
- * Egyptian Fractions, (ar) Scientific American October 1978, as "Puzzles and Number-Theory Problems Arising from the Curious Fractions of Ancient Egypt"
- * Eight Problems, (ar) Scientific American February 1960, as "A Fifth Collection of “Brain-Teasers”"
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- * The Eight Queens and Other Chessboard Diversions, (ar) Scientific American November 1962, as "Some Puzzles Based on Checkerboards"
- * Elegant Triangles, (ar) Scientific American June 1970, as "Elegant Triangle Theorems Not to Be Found in Euclid"
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- * Elevators, (ar) Scientific American February 1973, as "Up-And-Down Elevator Games and Piet Hein’s Mechanical Puzzles"
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- * The Erasing of Philbert the Fudger, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine November 1979
- * Ettarre an Anagram?, (ar) Kalki #7, 1968 [Ref. James Branch Cabell]
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- * Euler’s Spoilers: the Discovery of an Order-10 Graeco-Latin Square, (ar) Scientific American November 1959, as "How Three Modern Mathematicians Disproved a Celebrated Conjecture of Leonhard Euler"
- * Everything, (ar) Scientific American May 1976, as "A Few Words About Everything There Was, Is and Ever Will Be"
- * Exploring Carter’s Crater, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine January 1979
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- * Extraordinary Nonperiodic Tiling That Enriches the Theory of Tiles, (ar) Scientific American January 1977
- * Extraterrestrial Communication, (ar) Scientific American August 1965, as "Thoughts on the Task of Communication with Intelligent Organisms on Other Worlds"
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- * Fallacies, (ar) Scientific American January 1958, as "A Collection of Tantalizing Fallacies of Mathematics"
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- * Fearful Symmetry, (br) The New York Review of Books December 3 1992
- * A Few Words About Everything There Was, Is and Ever Will Be, (ar) Scientific American May 1976
- * Fibonacci and Lucas Numbers, (ar) Scientific American March 1969, as "The Multiple Fascinations of the Fibonacci Sequence"
- * Fibonacci Bamboo, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine September 1983
- * Fiction About Life in Two Dimensions, (ar) Scientific American July 1962
- * A Fifth Collection of “Brain-Teasers”, (ar) Scientific American February 1960
- * Finger Arithmetic, (ar) Scientific American September 1968, as "Counting Systems and the Relationship Between Numbers and the Real World"
- * Fingers and Colors on Chromo, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine August 1982
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- * First Answers, (ms) Puzzles from Other Worlds, Oxford University Press, 1986
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- * Flarp Flips a Fiver, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine March 1983
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- * The Flip-Strip Sonnet, the Lipogram and Other Mad Modes of Wordplay, (ar) Scientific American February 1977
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- * Fourth Answers, (ms) Puzzles from Other Worlds, Oxford University Press, 1986
- * Four Unusual Board Games, (ar) Scientific American October 1963, as "About Two New and Two Old Mathematical Board Games"
- * Fractal Music, Hypercards and More…: Mathematical Recreations from Scientific American, (nf) W.H. Freeman & Co. (hc), 1992
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- * Free Will Revisited, with a Mind-Bending Prediction Paradox by William Newcomb, (ar) Scientific American July 1973
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- * Freud’s Friend Wilhelm Fliess and His Theory of Male and Female Life Cycles, (ar) Scientific American July 1966
- * From Burrs to Berrocal, (ar) Scientific American January 1978, as "The Sculpture of Miguel Berrocal Can Be Taken Apart Like an Interlocking Mechanical Puzzle"
- * From Counting Votes to Making Votes Count: the Mathematics of Elections, (ar) Scientific American October 1980
- * From Rubber Ropes to Rolling Cubes, a Miscellany of Refreshing Problems, (ar) Scientific American March 1975
- * Fun and Serious Business with the Small Electronic Calculator, (ar) Scientific American July 1976
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- * Fun with Eggs: Uncooked, Cooked and Mathematic, (ar) Scientific American April 1980
- * Further Encounters with Touching Cubes, and the Paradoxes of Zeno As “Supertasks”, (ar) Scientific American December 1971
- * A Game in Which Standard Pieces Composed of Cubes Are Assembled Into Larger Forms, (ar) Scientific American September 1958
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- * The Games and Puzzles of Lewis Carroll, (ar) Scientific American March 1960
- * Games of Strategy for Two Players: Star Nim, Meander, Dodgem and Rex, (ar) Scientific American June 1975
- * Game Theory, Guess It, Foxholes, (ar) Scientific American December 1967, as "Game Theory Is Applied (For a Change) to Games"
- * Game Theory Is Applied (For a Change) to Games, (ar) Scientific American December 1967
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- * The Graceful Graphs of Solomon Golomb, or How to Number a Graph Parsimoniously, (ar) Scientific American March 1972
- * Graphs That Can Help Cannibals, Missionaries, Wolves, Goats and Cabbages Get There from Here, (ar) Scientific American March 1980
- * Graph Theory, (ar) Scientific American April 1964, as "Various Problems Based on Planar Graphs, or Sets of Vertices Connected by Edges"
- * Great Moments in Pseudoscience, (ar) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine July 1983
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- * A Handful of Combinatorial Problems Based on Dominoes, (ar) Scientific American December 1969
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- * Henry Ernest Dudeney: England’s Greatest Puzzlist, (ar) Scientific American June 1958, as "About Henry Ernest Dudeney, a Brilliant Creator of Puzzles"
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- * Hexes and Stars, (ar) Scientific American July 1974, as "On the Patterns and the Unusual Properties of Figurate Numbers"
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- * Home Sweet Home, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine July 1982
- * The Horrible Horns [Monte Featherstone], (ss) The London Mystery Magazine #7, 1950
- * The Horse on the Escalator, (ss) Esquire October 1946
- * Hot or Cold, (pz) Science Puzzlers by Martin Gardner & Anthony Ravielli, Macmillan, 1960
- * House on Fire [Humpty Dumpty Junior], (ss) Humpty Dumpty’s Magazine for Little Children #220, September 1974
- * How Bagson Bagged a Board Game, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine May 1979
- * How Crock and Watkins Cracked a Code, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine December 1979
- * How Lavinia Finds a Room on University Avenue, and Other Geometric Problems, (ar) Scientific American April 1981
- * How Not to Talk About Mathematics, (br) The New York Review of Books
- * How Rectangles, Including Squares, Can Be Divided Into Squares of Unequal Size, (ar) Scientific American November 1958
- * How’s-That-Again Flanagan, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine February 1985
- * How the Absence of Anything Leads to Thoughts of Nothing, (ar) Scientific American February 1975
- * How Three Modern Mathematicians Disproved a Celebrated Conjecture of Leonhard Euler, (ar) Scientific American November 1959
- * How to Be a Psychic, Even if You Are a Horse or Some Other Animal, (ar) Scientific American May 1979
- * How to Build a Game-Learning Machine and Teach It to Play and Win, (ar) Scientific American March 1962
- * How to Cook a Puzzle, or Mathematical One-Uppery, (ar) Scientific American May 1966
- * How to Play Dominoes in Two and Three Dimensions, (ar) Scientific American March 1961
- * How to Remember Numbers by Mnemonic Devices Such as Cuff Links and Red Zebras, (ar) Scientific American October 1957
- * How to Solve Puzzles by Graphing the Rebounds of a Bouncing Ball, (ar) Scientific American September 1963
- * How to Trisect an Angle, (ar) Scientific American June 1966, as "The Persistence (And Futility) of Efforts to Trisect the Angle"
- * How to Triumph at Nim by Playing Safe, and John Horton Conway’s Game “Hackenbush”, (ar) Scientific American January 1972
- * How to Turn a Chessboard Into a Computer and to Calculate with Negabinary Numbers, (ar) Scientific American April 1973
- * How to Use the Odd-Even Check for Tricks and Problem-Solving, (ar) Scientific American December 1963
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- * Hustle Off to Buffalo, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine April 1986
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- * Hypercubes, (ar) Scientific American November 1966, as "Is It Possible to Visualize a Four-Dimensional Figure?"
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- * The I Ching, (ar) Scientific American January 1974, as "The Combinatorial Basis of the “I Ching,” the Chinese Book of Divination and Wisdom"
- * The Icosian Game and the Tower of Hanoi, (ar) Scientific American May 1957, as "About the Remarkable Similarity Between the Icosian Game and the Tower of Hanoi"
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- * An Imaginary Dialogue on “Mathemagic”: Tricks Based on Mathematical Principles, (ar) Scientific American August 1960
- * Imaginary Numbers, (ar) Scientific American August 1979, as "The Imaginableness of the Imaginary Numbers"
- * Incidental Information About the Extraordinary Number Pi, (ar) Scientific American July 1960
- * Induction and Probability, (ar) Scientific American March 1976, as "On the Fabric of Inductive Logic, and Some Probability Paradoxes"
- * An Inductive Card Game, (ar) Scientific American June 1959
- * Infinite Regress, (ar) Scientific American April 1965, as "The Infinite Regress in Philosophy, Literature and Mathematical Proof"
- * The Infinite Regress in Philosophy, Literature and Mathematical Proof, (ar) Scientific American April 1965
- * Infinity and Information, (br) The New York Review of Books December 3 1987
- * Inner Planets Quiz, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine August 1985
- * In Some Patterns of Numbers or Words There May Be Less Than Meets the Eye, (ar) Scientific American September 1979
- * The Inspired Geometrical Symmetries of Scott Kim, (ar) Scientific American June 1981
- * Introduction, (in) Mathematical Puzzles and Diversions, Pelican, 1966
- * Introduction, (in) More Mathematical Puzzles and Diversions, Pelican, 1966
- * Introduction, (in) The Night Is Large: Collected Essays, 1938-1995, Penguin, 1997
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- * In Which a Mathematical Aesthetic Is Applied to Modern Minimal Art, (ar) Scientific American November 1978
- * In Which Dm (Dr. Matrix) Is Revealed As the Guru of Pm (Pentagonal Meditation), (ar) Scientific American November 1976
- * In Which Joining Sets of Points by Lines Leads Into Diverse (And Diverting) Paths, (ar) Scientific American November 1977
- * In Which Monster Curves Force Redefinition of the Word “Curve”, (ar) Scientific American December 1976
- * In Which Players of Tic-Tac-Toe Are Taught to Hunt Bigger Game, (ar) Scientific American April 1979
- * In Which the Author Chats Again with Dr. Matrix, Numerologist Extraordinary, (ar) Scientific American January 1961
- * In Which the Editor of This Department Meets the Legendary Bertrand Apollinax, (ar) Scientific American May 1961
- * The Irrelevance of Conan Doyle, (ar) Beyond Baker Street ed. Michael Harrison, Bobbs-Merrill, 1976
- * The Irrelevance of “Everything”, (ar) Scientific American 1976
- * Isiah Berlin: Fox or Hedgehog?, (ar) Dimensions v6 #2, 1991
- * Is It a Superintelligent Robot or Does Dr. Matrix Ride Again?, (ar) Scientific American December 1978
- * Is It Possible to Visualize a Four-Dimensional Figure?, (ar) Scientific American November 1966
- * The Island of the Five Colors, (ss) Future Tense ed. Kendell Foster Crossen, Greenberg, 1952
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- * It Happened Even to Houdini, (ar) Argosy October 1950
- * It’s All Done with Mirrors, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine mid December 1984
- * James Hugh Riley Shows, Inc., (ar) Scientific American April 1959, as "The Mathematical Diversions of a Fictitious Carnival Man"
- * Jam, Hot, and Other Games, (ar) Scientific American February 1967, as "Mathematical Strategies for Two-Person Contests"
- * The Jinn from Hyperspace, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine July 6 1981
- * The Jock Who Wanted to Be Fifty, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine August 1983
- * John Horton Conway’s Book Covers an Infinity of Games, (ar) Scientific American September 1976
- * The “Jump Proof” and Its Similarity to the Toppling of a Row of Dominoes, (ar) Scientific American May 1977
- * Klein Bottles and Other Surfaces, (ar) Scientific American July 1963, as "Topological Diversions, Including a Bottle with No Inside or Outside"
- * Klingon and Other Artificial Languages, (ar) The Skeptical Inquirer July/August 1995
- * Knights of the Square Table, (ar) Scientific American October 1967, as "Problems That Are Built on the Knight’s Move in Chess"
- * Knots and Borromean Rings, (ar) Scientific American September 1961, as "Surfaces with Edges Linked in the Same Way As the Three Rings of a Well-Known Design"
- * Knotted Doughnuts and Other Mathematical Entertainments, (nf) W.H. Freeman & Co. (hc), 1986
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- * Knotty Problems with a Two-Hole Torus, (ar) Scientific American December 1972
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- * The Laffer Curve, (ar) Scientific American December 1981, as "The Laffer Curve and Other Laughs in Current Economics"
- * The Laffer Curve and Other Laughs in Current Economics, (ar) Scientific American December 1981
- * Last Recreations: Hydras, Eggs, and other Mathematical Mystifications, (nf) Copernicus Books (hc), 1997
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- * The Lattice of Integers Considered As an Orchard or a Billiard Table, (ar) Scientific American May 1965
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- * Lavinia Seeks a Room and Other Problems, (ar) Scientific American April 1981, as "How Lavinia Finds a Room on University Avenue, and Other Geometric Problems"
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- * Left or Right?, (ar) Scientific American March 1958, as "About Left- and Right-Handedness, Mirror Images and Kindred Matters"
- * Lessons from Dr. Matrix in Chess and Numerology, (ar) Scientific American January 1971
- * Lewis Carroll and His Alice Books, (ar) The Annotated Alice by Lewis Carroll, Clarkson Potter, 1960
- * The Life and Work of Sam Loyd, a Mighty Inventor of Puzzles, (ar) Scientific American August 1957
- * Limits of Infinite Series, (ar) Scientific American November 1964, as "Some Paradoxes and Puzzles Involving Infinite Series and the Concept of Limit"
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- * Lost on Capra, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine Summer 1977
- * Love and Tiddlywinks, (vi) Esquire September 1949
- * The Loves of Lady Coldpence, (ss) Esquire March 1948
- * Lucifer at Las Vegas, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine April 1980
- * Luke Warm at Forty Below, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine November 23 1981
- * Machismo on Byronia, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine Winter 1977
- * Macmahon’s Color Triangles and the Joys of Fitting Them Together, (ar) Scientific American October 1968
- * The Magic Numbers of Dr. Matrix, (nf) Prometheus Books (hc), 1985
- * Magic Squares, (ar) Scientific American March 1959, as "Concerning the Properties of Various Magic Squares"
- * Magic Squares and Cubes, (ar) Scientific American January 1976, as "A Breakthrough in Magic Squares, and the First Perfect Magic Cube"
- * Magic Stars and Polyhedrons, (ar) Scientific American December 1965, as "Magic Stars, Graphs and Polyhedrons"
- * Magic Stars, Graphs and Polyhedrons, (ar) Scientific American December 1965
- * Magic with a Matrix, (ar) Scientific American January 1957, as "A New Kind of Magic Square with Remarkable Properties"
- * Mandelbrot’s Fractals, (ar) Scientific American December 1976, as "In Which Monster Curves Force Redefinition of the Word “Curve”"
- * Martin Gardner’s New Mathematical Diversions from Scientific American, (nf) Simon & Schuster (hc), 1966
- * Martin Gardner’s Sixth Book of Mathematical Games from Scientific American, (nf) W.H. Freeman & Co. (hc), 1971
- * Mascheroni Constructions, (ar) Scientific American September 1969, as "Geometric Constructions with a Compass and a Straightedge, and Also with a Compass Alone"
- * A Matchbox Game-Learning Machine, (ar) Scientific American March 1962, as "How to Build a Game-Learning Machine and Teach It to Play and Win"
- * Matches, (ar) Scientific American July 1969, as "Tricks, Games and Puzzles That Employ Matches As Counters and Line Segments"
- * Mathematical Card Tricks, (ar) Scientific American September 1957, as "Concerning Various Card Tricks with a Mathematical Message"
- * Mathematical Carnival, (nf) Knopf (hc), 1975
- * Mathematical Chess Problems, (ar) Scientific American June 1979, as "Chess Problems on a Higher Plane, Including Mirror Images, Rotations and the Superqueen"
- * Mathematical Circus, (nf) Knopf (hc), 1979
- * The Mathematical Diversions of a Fictitious Carnival Man, (ar) Scientific American April 1959
- * Mathematical Induction and Colored Hats, (ar) Scientific American May 1977, as "The “Jump Proof” and Its Similarity to the Toppling of a Row of Dominoes"
- * Mathematical Magic Show, (nf) Knopf (hc), 1977
- * Mathematical Magic Tricks, (ar) Scientific American August 1964, as "Concerning Several Magic Tricks Based on Mathematical Principles"
- * Mathematical Puzzles and Diversions, (nf) Simon & Schuster, 1959
- * Mathematical Strategies for Two-Person Contests, (ar) Scientific American February 1967
- * Mathematical Tricks with Cards, (ar) Scientific American July 1972, as "Amazing Mathematical Card Tricks That Do Not Require Prestidigitation"
- * Mathematical Zoo, (ar) Scientific American June 1978, as "A Mathematical Zoo of Astounding Critters, Imaginary and Otherwise"
- * A Mathematical Zoo of Astounding Critters, Imaginary and Otherwise, (ar) Scientific American June 1978
- * Mathematics and the Folkways, (ar) Journal of Philosophy March 30 1950
- * Mazes, (ar) Scientific American January 1959, as "About Mazes and How They Can Be Traversed"
- * Mechanical Puzzles, (ar) Scientific American September 1959, as "Concerning Mechanical Puzzles, and How an Enthusiast Has Collected 2,000 of Them"
- * Meet Private Eye Oglesby, (ss) The London Mystery Magazine #8, February/March 1951, as "Crunchy Wunchy’s First Case"
- * Melody-Making Machines, (ar) Scientific American December 1974, as "The Arts As Combinatorial Mathematics, or How to Compose Like Mozart with Dice"
- * Memorizing Numbers, (ar) Scientific American October 1957, as "How to Remember Numbers by Mnemonic Devices Such as Cuff Links and Red Zebras"
- * Merlina and the Colored Ice, (ss) A.D. Fall 1951
- * Minimal Sculpture, (ar) Scientific American November 1978, as "In Which a Mathematical Aesthetic Is Applied to Modern Minimal Art"
- * Minimal Steiner Trees, (ar) Scientific American June 1986, as "Casting a Net on a Checkerboard and Other Puzzles of the Forest "
- * A Miscellany of Transcendental Problems: Simple to State but Not at All Easy to Solve, (ar) Scientific American June 1972
- * The Missing Walnuts, (vi) Humpty Dumpty’s Magazine for Little Children February 1955
- * Miss Medford’s Moon, (nv) Esquire February 1952
- * Mr. Apollinax Visits New York, (ar) Scientific American May 1961, as "In Which the Editor of This Department Meets the Legendary Bertrand Apollinax"
- * A Mixed Bag of Logical and Illogical Problems to Solve, (ar) Scientific American November 1967
- * A Mixed Bag of Problems, (ar) Scientific American November 1963
- * A Möbius Band Has a Finite Thickness, and So It Is Actually a Twisted Prism, (ar) Scientific American August 1978
- * Möbius Bands, (ar) Scientific American December 1968, as "The World of the Möbius Strip: Endless, Edgeless and One-Sided"
- * Modulo Arithmetic and Hummer’s Wicked Witch, (ar) Scientific American February 1981, as "Gauss’s Congruence Theory Was Mod As Early As 1801"
- * The Monkey and the Coconuts, (ar) Scientific American April 1958, as "Concerning the Celebrated Puzzle of Five Sailors, a Monkey and a Pile of Coconuts"
- * Monorails on Mars, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine January 1983
- * The Monster and Other Sporadic Groups, (ar) Scientific American June 1980, as "The Capture of the Monster: a Mathematical Group with a Ridiculous Number of Elements"
- * More About Complex Dominoes, (ar) Scientific American December 1957
- * More About Mother, and Elsewhere, (ar) Kalki #5, 1967
- * More About the Shapes That Can Be Made with Complex Dominoes, (ar) Scientific American November 1960
- * More About Tiling the Plane: the Possibilities of Polyominoes, Polyiamonds, and Polyhexes, (ar) Scientific American August 1975
- * More Mathematical Puzzles and Diversions, (nf) Simon & Schuster, 1961
- * More on Tangrams: Combinatorial Problems and the Game Possibilities of Snug Tangrams, (ar) Scientific American September 1974
- * M-Pire Maps, (ar) Scientific American February 1980, as "The Coloring of Unusual Maps Leads Into Uncharted Territory"
- * Mrs. Perkins’ Quilt and Other Square-Packing Problems, (ar) Scientific American September 1966, as "The Problem of Mrs. Perkins’ Quilt"
- * The Multiple Charms of Pascal’s Triangle, (ar) Scientific American December 1966
- * The Multiple Fascinations of the Fibonacci Sequence, (ar) Scientific American March 1969
- * Mysterious Smith, (ss) The No-Sided Professor, Prometheus, 1987
- * The Mystery of Free Will, (ar) from Whys of a Philosophical Scrivener, Morrow, 1983
- * Mystery Tiles at Murray Hill, (pz) Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine February 15 1982
(continued)
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