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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Mathematics in unusual places, September 30, 2000
This review is from: Imaginary Numbers: An Anthology of Marvelous Mathematical Stories, Diversions, Poems, and Musings (Hardcover)
Mathematics can be a part of fiction in many ways, and this collection has some of the most unusual that I have ever read. However, it is unusual in the delightful rather than distasteful sense. As a fan of science fiction, I have always found the inclusion of mathematics in fiction to be some of the best written of all the stories I have read. I found these stories, all previously published, to be entertaining and often very subtle in the points that were made.
Some of the stories are classics. There is an excerpt from Flatland by Edwin Abbott Abbott, what I believe to be the best piece of mathematical fiction ever written and a piece by Martin Gardner, the best mathematical populist that has ever lived. Stanislaw Lem's story about the hotel with a countably infinite number of rooms is one of the best expositions of the apparent paradoxes of the countably infinite set that has ever been created. It could be used as a textbook example to explain this often difficult point.
If you like fiction with a point to make based on applications of some serious science, then you will find these stories well worth reading.

Published in Journal of Recreational Mathematics, reprinted with permission.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A dash of elegance science fictions, April 17, 2000
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This review is from: Imaginary Numbers: An Anthology of Marvelous Mathematical Stories, Diversions, Poems, and Musings (Hardcover)
This book is a good starting point for the journey to the 'dark' science-philosophical-fiction reading. Featuring from Lewis Carroll's work to Italo Calvino, it provides a wide range of mathematical-fiction and poetry collection (ie. how love can be so similar to parallel lines). A definite must, especially for mathematician!
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars For Anthology Lovers, March 15, 2001
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"croix19" (Brunswick, GA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Imaginary Numbers: An Anthology of Marvelous Mathematical Stories, Diversions, Poems, and Musings (Hardcover)
This book is undoubtedly "An Anthology of Marvelous Mathematical Stories, Diversions, Poems, and Musings." This collection of works spans a broad field of all types of literary genres: from fantacy to philosophy, from sci-fi to logic, from wonderfully outrageous to profoundly simple. Anyone with a taste for short stories and poetry will be able to appreciate the thought-provoking material presented in this anthology. For instance, one can learn what life would be like in a two-dimentional universe. Or one can travel to a land where improbable dragons become probable and pop into existance out of thin air. And one can ponder the similarities between love and parallel lines. I found this book to be at times funny and also serious. It has something for everyone. Enjoy.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I Can't Recommend it Enough, July 10, 2008
My parents bought this for me right when it came out I guess, which means I was about 14 at the time. Looking back, I've realized just how much the stories here influenced me. Burning Chrome is still one of my favorite stories, and there's a little-known PKD gem called the Golden Man that brings up all sorts of ideas about intelligence and evolution. It's not all dark stories, but they're the most memorable to me. Especially two of them which have a unique take on the horrors of war, Schwartzchild Radius and The Private War of Private Jacob. I need to dig this book up again. Make sure you do too.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Worthy Successor..., January 30, 2009
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Robin Boone (San Diego, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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It was a pleasant surprise to discover this book. Its description reminded me of Martin Gardner's Fantasia Mathematica and its sequel, The Mathematical Magpie. In fact that is exactly, deliciously, what William Frucht has given us. In an afterward, he tells how he begged Gardner to put together a new mathematical fantasia. Gardner finally suggests that Frucht put it together himself! Gardner's original anthology is one of my favorite anthologies of all time, and Frucht's successor is satisfyingly worthy. Three cheers for Frucht! Now if only there were sequels to the sequels...one sequel in the first square of a giant chessboard, two in the second, four in the third, eight in the fourth...ah, yes...what a beautiful thought, albeit a tad mite greedy...but like Stanislaw Lem's theoretical dragons, maybe the theoretical sequels to the sequels could sometimes be partially real...
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Imaginary Numbers: An Anthology of Marvelous Mathematical Stories, Diversions, Poems, and Musings
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