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Nightmare Abbey

Illustrated - Sudoku Puzzle

Thomas Love Peacock

Games & Activities / Sudoku

Limited discounted copies at $6.49 ($15.97)
  • Comes with a Fiction Book to read while solving sudoku
  • 1 Sudoku Puzzle per page
  • Book size - 8.5X11
  • 99 Unique Sudoku Puzzles
Sudoku for Kids

Kids are loving it. The boxes are so big, that sometimes kids like to color them red, blue and yellow!

Sudoku Books for Adults

"Strain your brain, not your eyes." Elderly people are loving it! Looking for a gift for your granny? You got it!

Beware of other Sudoku Sellers!

Other sudoku sellers put 4-6 sudoku puzzles per page to increase their profit margins by reducing the printing cost per page. It's impossible to solve such small sudoku puzzles. It's an utter waste of money. Stay away from books with hundreds of sudoku puzzles but with less pages.

About the Fiction Book Comes with 10+ illustrations"Mr. Glowry's son Scythrop locks himself up in a tower where he reads German tragedies and transcendental philosophy and develops a ""passion for reforming the world."" Disappointed in love, a sorrowful Scythrop decides the only thing to do is to commit suicide, but circumstances persuade him to instead follow his father in a love of misanthropy and Madeira. In addition to satire and comic romance, Nightmare Abbey presents a biting critique of the texts we view as central to British romanticism. Thomas Love Peacock is literature's perfect individualist. He has points in common with Aristophanes, Plato, Rabelais, Voltaire, and even Aldous Huxley, but resembles none of them; we can talk of the satirical novel of ideas, but his satire is too cheery and good-natured, his novel too rambling, and his ideas too jovially destructive for the label to stick. A romantic in his youth and a friend of Shelley, he happily made hay of the romantic movement in Nightmare Abbey, clamping Coleridge, Byron, and Shelley himself in a kind of painless pillory. And in Crotchet Castle he did no less for the political economists, pitting his gifts of exaggeration and ridicule against scientific progress and March of Mind. Yet the romantic in him never died: the long, witty, and indecisive talk of his characters is set in wild, natural scenery which Peacock describes with true feeling.
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