Bananagrams!
By (Author) Abe Nathanson
By (author) Puzzles by Joe Edley
By (author) Rena Nathanson
Workman Publishing
Workman Adult
1st December 2009
United States
General
Non Fiction
793.734
Paperback
282
Width 126mm, Height 176mm, Spine 20mm
340g
Now comes "Banangrams! The Official Book", which translates the brain-twisting word fun of the game onto the page, and adds much, much more. Even if you've never dipped your hand into the Bananagrams pouch, the book stands on its own with hours of challenging play. Written by the only three-time National Scrabble Champion, Joe Edley, "Bananagrams!" offers sixteen clever puzzle types, including Banana Trees, where the object is to build word grids based on a theme. It features Banana Splits, a collection of four quick anagram puzzles to be solved in rapid-fire style; Banana Leaves that features four-, five-, six- and seven-letter words; Banana Filling - what happens when you add a 'K'; and more. The puzzles have four levels of difficulty, from one banana to four bananas. Plus, there are glossaries; special strategies for Bananagrams: The Game; a list of 'Weords' - weird words that are cool to play; two- and three-letter words to take your game to the next level; fun banana facts; and, of course, an answer key.
Abe Nathanson and his daughter, Rena, along with his grandchildren Aaron and Ava invented Bananagrams while spending the summer of 2005 together at a beach house in Narragansett, Rhode Island. The whole Nathanson family is involved in the growing game business. Rena and her family reside in the U.K., and Abe lives in Providence, Rhode Island, where he runs the company's headquarters.
Joe Edley, the only three-time National Scrabble Champion, is the author of The Official Scrabble Puzzle Book, Everything Scrabble, and Scrabble Puzzles Volumes 1-4, as well as Workman's Scrabble Page-A-Day Calendar. Director of Clubs and Tournaments for the National Scrabble Association, he's created thousands of word puzzles for The Scrabble News and writes the syndicated newspaper column "Scrabblegrams." He lives with his family on Long Island, New York.