1967_Sackson_379_December 25.jpg
Creator
Sid Sackson
Date
1967
Format
.jpg
Source
Box 1, Object 5, Sid Sackson collection
Item sets
Rights Statement
The Strong, Rochester, New York.
Full Metadata
1967_Sackson_379_December 25.jpg
Title
1967_Sackson_379_December 25.jpg
Creator
Sid Sackson
Date
1967
Type
image
Format
.jpg
Source
Box 1, Object 5, Sid Sackson collection
Language
English
Coverage
1967
Rights
The Strong, Rochester, New York.
transcription
MONDAY 25 DECEMBER
Christmas Day 1967 359th day - 6 days to come
Thought of the name IN SEARCH OF BIG AND LITTLE GAME
for my book of games. Mentioned it to Claude when
I spoke to him on the phone. He pointed out that if
the word "Games" appears first it can be found by
looking at an alphabetic list of books in print. Later
thought of the name GAMES FOR THE CONNOISSEUR, A
SUPPLEMENT TO HOYLE.
Nothing else on games in conversation with Claude, except
that he thinks that cartoons or light illustrations
would help immeasurably to sell the book. BB knows a
few girls, including Lilian Barrasch, who could probably do the
illustrating.
Worked out another game - tentative name - DETOUR.
Tried it sketchily and further changes, I am sure can be
made. The following is a first approximation.
[diagram at left: 8 x 8 grid, rows and columns numbered 1-8. Some arrows drawn on grid.]
Draw an 8 x 8 grid. Two play. One player takes
the red cars from 1 to 8, the other the
black cards from 1 to 8. Players shuffle
their cards and take a hand of three
cards. Each time they play 2 cards they take
2 to replace them. When their deck is ex-
hausted it is reshuffled and used again.
A play of two cards identifies a square.
The player playing places an arrow in this
square pointing in any of the 4 directions.
Or if an arrow is already there it is
turned (by erasing & redrawing).
Object is to complete a path of arrows starting, for one
player, at the left edge and going to the right edge, for
the other player it must be from top edge to bottom edge. The com-
pleted path must have at least 4 turns, and the player
scores 1 point for each turn. (The example shown is a 5-point
win for the left-right player, starting at 1-6 and ending at
8-7.)
For a simpler game, draw two cards at each turn and
play those two cards.
The game can also be played on a checkerboard using
cardboard squares with arrows.
The game can also be played on a 6x6 grid using
3 or 2 dice.
Read thru parts of THE WORLD OF KI to study the way it was
written.
Christmas Day 1967 359th day - 6 days to come
Thought of the name IN SEARCH OF BIG AND LITTLE GAME
for my book of games. Mentioned it to Claude when
I spoke to him on the phone. He pointed out that if
the word "Games" appears first it can be found by
looking at an alphabetic list of books in print. Later
thought of the name GAMES FOR THE CONNOISSEUR, A
SUPPLEMENT TO HOYLE.
Nothing else on games in conversation with Claude, except
that he thinks that cartoons or light illustrations
would help immeasurably to sell the book. BB knows a
few girls, including Lilian Barrasch, who could probably do the
illustrating.
Worked out another game - tentative name - DETOUR.
Tried it sketchily and further changes, I am sure can be
made. The following is a first approximation.
[diagram at left: 8 x 8 grid, rows and columns numbered 1-8. Some arrows drawn on grid.]
Draw an 8 x 8 grid. Two play. One player takes
the red cars from 1 to 8, the other the
black cards from 1 to 8. Players shuffle
their cards and take a hand of three
cards. Each time they play 2 cards they take
2 to replace them. When their deck is ex-
hausted it is reshuffled and used again.
A play of two cards identifies a square.
The player playing places an arrow in this
square pointing in any of the 4 directions.
Or if an arrow is already there it is
turned (by erasing & redrawing).
Object is to complete a path of arrows starting, for one
player, at the left edge and going to the right edge, for
the other player it must be from top edge to bottom edge. The com-
pleted path must have at least 4 turns, and the player
scores 1 point for each turn. (The example shown is a 5-point
win for the left-right player, starting at 1-6 and ending at
8-7.)
For a simpler game, draw two cards at each turn and
play those two cards.
The game can also be played on a checkerboard using
cardboard squares with arrows.
The game can also be played on a 6x6 grid using
3 or 2 dice.
Read thru parts of THE WORLD OF KI to study the way it was
written.
Item sets