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Titles List

  • Search for the words ... without struggling to see the letters!   Because word searches should tax your mind, not your eyes, this fifth book in our popular series gives solvers more of these large-print puzzles to enjoy. Created by John… Read More

  • Hard on the Brain, Easy on the Eyes!   Challenging, baffling, and absorbing, these word search puzzles are easy-to-read in large-size print. There’s a little bit of pop culture, sports and games, and more to keep things interesting, and a… Read More

  • Solving word search puzzles should challenge your mind, not tax your eyes—and that’s exactly what this collection of more than 90 themed large-print puzzles does.   If you love to solve word searches, but have trouble reading the writing on… Read More

  • Hard on the brain, easy on the eyes! Solving word search puzzles should tax your mind, not your eyes. Luckily, puzzlesmith Mark Danna has provided plenty of word search challenges with large type for your enjoyment. The letters in the… Read More

  • If youve been searching for word searches you can actually see without a struggle, look no further. The letters in these grids are large, as are the words in the lists. So, if you still cant find a word in… Read More

John Chaneski

About the Author

John Chaneski can be heard on public radio stations across the country as a “puzzle guy” on the show A Way With Words (waywordradio.org). For nearly 30 years he has created puzzles and games for magazines such as Games and Time Out New York; periodicals such as Parade and Nickelodeon’s GAS; and websites such as CNN.com, ABC.com, and Wordnik.com. He spent two years writing questions (and answers) for the TV game show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. He lives in Brooklyn, NY.
 
Mark Danna’s credits include more than two dozen word search books; over 100 crosswords in venues such as The New York Times; and, as coauthor, seven annual editions of Mensa’s page-a-day Brain Puzzlers calendar. Since 1991, he has penned the clued-rhymes puzzle Wordy Gurdy under the alias Tricky Ricky Kane for an international newspaper syndicate. Danna currently serves as assistant to the puzzle editor of The Wall Street Journal. He lives in the Bronx, NY.

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