New York: McGraw-Hill, 1965. — 52 p.
There are 159 problems. or which 62 m Algebra, 20 Pure Geometry, 20 Trigonometry, 32 Advanced, and 25 "Additional" Solutions, occupying 50 pages, no given for all but the last 25. One might define a Problem as a Non-Routine Exercise and so might expect a Non-Routine Problem to be quite exotic; in bet the contents of this book are of Sixth-Form standard, though there are some challenging questions. Readers on this side of the Atlantic will be gratified to know that of the six titles in the bibliography