Some things exist
for quite a while before they erupt into a full-blown
fad -- such was the case with crossword puzzles.
The first known published crossword puzzle was created
by Arthur Wynne on December 21, 1913 and he is usually
deemed as the inventor of the popular word game. One
of the fans of the puzzles was the cousin of Richard
Simon. Simon and his business partner Max Schuster owned
a small three-person publishing company that would soon
become Simon and Schuster.
Because his cousin enjoyed
the puzzles so much, Simon sought to put together a
compilation of the puzzles in a book. Simon and Schuster
quickly arranged a meeting with the puzzle editors of
the New York World and they agreed to put together a
collection that was printed in 3,600 copies of the book.
Although rejected by many book dealers early on, they
eventually caught on and demand for the book exploded.
Soon crossword puzzles books popped up everywhere, sometimes
in other languages and often with a particular subject
matter theme.
As
a side note, the sale of dictionaries and thesauruses
exploded with the emergence of the crossword puzzle
and the collective average IQ probably increased as
well.
note:
the image above is a copy of the first ever crossword
puzzle. |