What Do You Know? offers the chance to explore some of the roads not taken. But the real point is just to enjoy the trip. As Bragdon observes at the very beginning of the book: "The trick, therefore, is to approach these tests without anxiety and to apply their answers with as much guile as possible. Remarkably like life, what?" But that's another question!
In addition to Can You Pass These Tests? and other books, Allen D. Bragdon has created daily puzzles for international syndication in The New York Times. His anxiety-motif nightmare is discovering not only that he cannot find the classroom in which the final exams are being given, but also that he has read none of the material.
What Do You Know? offers the chance to explore some of the roads not taken. But the real point is just to enjoy the trip. As Bragdon observes at the very beginning of the book: "The trick, therefore, is to approach these tests without anxiety and to apply their answers with as much guile as possible. Remarkably like life, what?" But that's another question!
In addition to Can You Pass These Tests? and other books, Allen D. Bragdon has created daily puzzles for international syndication in The New York Times. His anxiety-motif nightmare is discovering not only that he cannot find the classroom in which the final exams are being given, but also that he has read none of the material.