Alex Bellos holds a degree in mathematics and philosophy from Oxford University. His bestselling books Here’s Looking at Euclid and The Grapes of Math have been translated into more than 20 languages and were both shortlisted for the Royal Society Science Book prize. His puzzle books include Can You Solve My Problems?, Puzzle Ninja, Perilous Problems for Puzzle Lovers, and The Language Lover’s Puzzle Book, and he is also the coauthor of the coloring books Patterns of the Universe and Visions of the Universe. He has launched an elliptical pool table, LOOP. He writes a popular-math blog and a puzzle blog for the Guardian, and he won the Association of British Science Writers award for best science blog in 2016. He lives in London.
"2016 Academics’ Choice Smart Book Award Winner
One of Amazon’s Best Books of the Month in Crafts, Hobbies &
Home
"Illustrations designed to introduce doodlers to a range of
challenging mathematical principles."
*Science*
"Flipping through this new coloring book is a mesmerizing journey.
From perfect hexagonal tilings to luscious sine waves to nautilus
shell spirals, every line illustration by mathematical artist
Edmund Harriss (and a handful of others) brings a hypnotic sense of
harmony."
*Science Friday*
"Enough coloring inside the lines—it’s time to start coloring
inside the cosines."
*WIRED*
"Think coloring books are just for little kids? Think again."
*Boys’ Life*
"An intricate, geeky coloring book for adults."
*Independent on Sunday*
"A beautiful math coloring book offering young and old alike the
joy of patterns that are pleasing and rigorous, regular and
creative, all at the same time."
*Cédric Villani, Fields medalist and author of Birth of a
Theorem*
"A math coloring book for kids and adults . . . Irresistible!"
*Steven Strogatz, author of The Joy of x*
"I wouldn’t have expected anything less from math adventurer Bellos
and mathematical artist and tiling fan Harriss, whose personalities
both come through in the book—from the beautiful illustrations to
the playful style. . . . The range of types of math on display is
super. . . . A beautiful object."
*Aperiodical blog*
"This is big fun. . . . Just looking at these pages is a treat—they
have a life all their own, even before color is applied. . . . A
coloring book with a sharp new angle."
*The Papercraft Post blog*
"Adds a bit of braininess to the relatively simple act of coloring
while keeping the stress-relieving benefits."
*Adult Coloring 101*
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