Word Search Puzzle for Book Lovers (Plus, How to Make One)

 

WORD SEARCH FOR READERS/AUTHORS

I made a word search puzzle for anyone who appreciates books.

Later, I will also show you how I made the puzzle.

First, here is the puzzle.

Here is the word list:

  • AMAZON
  • ANTAGONIST
  • AUTHOR
  • BESTSELLER
  • BLOG
  • BLURB
  • BOOKMARK
  • BOOKSTORE
  • CHAPTER
  • CHARACTER
  • CLASSIC
  • CLIMAX
  • CONTENTS
  • COVER
  • DESIGNER
  • EDITION
  • EDITOR
  • FANTASY
  • FICTION
  • FONT
  • GLOSSARY
  • GRAMMAR
  • HERO
  • INDEX
  • ISBN
  • JUSTIFIED
  • KINDLE
  • LEAF
  • MARGINS
  • MYSTERY
  • NICHE
  • OUTLINE
  • PAGE
  • PLOT
  • POEM
  • POET
  • PROTAGONIST
  • PUBLISH
  • QUOTE
  • READ
  • REVIEW
  • ROMANCE
  • SERIES
  • SETTING
  • SPINE
  • SUSPENSE
  • SYNOPSIS
  • TITLE
  • TRILOGY
  • TYPE
  • TYPO
  • UNIT
  • VOLUME
  • WORDS
  • WRITER

HOW TO MAKE A WORD SEARCH PUZZLE

I will show you how to make a word search puzzle in Microsoft Word or Excel.

I will focus specifically on Word for Windows, though Excel is very similar.

There are a few differences.

  • Word lets you enter the width of the columns and the height of the rows in inches so that you know they are exactly the same. The numerical measures for these values in Excel can be confusing, and unless you research what they mean you need to eyeball it. But you can still get them close enough that it doesn’t matter.
  • Word has a few formatting issues (like line spacing and cell margins) that can be problematic for the table, but I’ll show you how to deal with them.
  • If you’re trying to make a book, Excel can cause trouble trying to get predictable and consistent page margins, page headers, etc. on the final printed product. But a Word file with dozens of tables becomes a complex file prone to being slow to work with and becoming corrupt. For a book, if you can convert the tables individually into high-quality JPEGS (300 DPI) and insert these into Word (after researching the tricks to avoid having the pictures compressed), the file will be much more manageable. You can also separate the book into several smaller files and combine them together into a single PDF if you have access to Adobe Acrobat DC (not to be confused with the free Adobe Reader). Beware that many Word to PDF converters don’t have this capability, so find out what you have access to before working with a bunch of small files.

The first thing I did was come up with a list of related words. I made a list of words that relate to books, like “Kindle” and “poem.”

Next, I inserted a table in Microsoft Word using Insert > Table > Insert Table. My table has 18 rows and 18 columns, but you should pick the size that suits your table. If you need a smaller or larger table, you can easily insert or delete rows/columns as needed.

The default table has unequal column width and row height, so I adjusted this. I highlighted the entire table (but not beyond the table) and clicked the Layout tab on the top of the screen. I changed the Height and Width of all of my rows and columns to 0.25″. Depending on your font size, font style, and what suits your eye, you may need different values.

With the entire table highlighted, I also changed the font style to Courier New and the font size to 12 points on the Home ribbon. You can use a different font style or size. What I like about Courier New for a word search is that all of the letters are the same width. However, the font is a little light, so it’s not perfect. I suggest playing around with the font options, and print out a sample on paper before you commit.

There are two things you need to do in order to have good spacing and centering:

  • With the whole table highlighted (but not beyond the table), on the Layout tab select the center/middle alignment on the tic-tac-toe grid of icons in the Alignment group. This centers every cell horizontally and vertically, but it won’t be perfect unless you also complete the next step.
  • With the entire table highlighted, click the little arrow-like icon on the bottom right corner of the Paragraph group on the Home ribbon. This opens up the paragraph properties box. Set the line spacing to Single, and the Spacing Before and After to zero. Special should be set to None and the Indentation settings should be zero.

I put the CAPS lock on my keyboard since I prefer a word search with uppercase letters.

I started typing in words horizontally, vertically, and diagonally, forward and backward. I challenged myself to see how many words relating to books I could squeeze into the puzzle, and I managed to use words beginning with every letter of the alphabet from A thru W. It’s not necessarily the way to go; I just had fun doing it.

At this stage, my puzzle looked like this:

Next I added letters to the blank cells. I studied my word list, trying to create letter sequences that might make the word search slightly more challenging, and add a few letters that hadn’t been used much (like X). If you’re looking for BOOK and you see BOOI, for example, your eye and mind can get fixated on the wrong sequence and not find the right one as quickly. The more experience you have solving word searches, the more you learn about the kinds of things that affect you while solving the puzzle. But remember that other people may think differently.

Now I highlighted the entire table, went to the Design tab, clicked the little arrow beneath Borders, and selected No Border.

Then I changed the pen thickness to 1 pt (the default was 1/2 pt). If you plan to publish a book, Amazon KDP (for example) recommends a minimum of 1 pt for the thickness of line drawings.

Next, highlight the entire table, go back to Borders, and select Outside Borders. Your puzzle should look like this:

I zoomed in as far as I could and still see the whole table and used the Snapshot tool to take a picture of the table. (Pro tip: Make sure your cursor is below or above the table so that the cursor doesn’t show up in the picture of your table.) If making a book, you could change this to 300 DPI using image software like Photoshop. Beware that increasing the DPI isn’t magic: If it has to invent pixels, the picture may look blurry or pixilated. My computer takes 192 DPI snapshots, whereas some are much lower (72 or 96 DPI). I also have a very large monitor, so when I zoom in, I have a very large picture on my screen. Depending on your computer, you might get more or fewer pixels.

If your picture is larger in inches than you need, when you increase the DPI, if you also decrease the dimensions in inches, you might already have enough pixels that you don’t get a blurry or pixilated image. If you plan to make a book, you need to test this out, especially print out a page on a deskjet printer as a sample.

Since I just did this for my blog, not a book, I didn’t bother so much with this one.

Next I inserted the picture of the table into a Word file and added my word list to it, like the picture below. There is no particular reason that I put words on both sides of the table. I would recommend reading a few word search puzzle books and getting ideas for what formatting appeals to you.

Now there is the issue of making an answer key.

There are a few ways to go about this. You could just highlight the letters in the table and change the colors of those cells (for example, to a shading of 25% gray using the Design ribbon).

If you try to use Word’s drawing tools to create rounded rectangles, beware that some letters may actually move around and row heights or column widths may change slightly.

Well, there is a way around that. Insert the picture of the table into a new file in JPEG format (wrapped In Line With Text, on its own “paragraph”). Then you can make rounded rectangles and lay them over the picture without having to worry about the format of the table changing.

I created rounded rectangles (using Insert > Shapes) with a width of 0.18″. If you use a different font style or size, you may need a different width. For the diagonals, I clicked the little arrow-like icon beside Size on the Format ribbon (when the rounded rectangle was selected) and changed the rotation angle to 45 or 315 degrees.

I used a lot of copy/paste to make other rounded rectangles, trying to be consistent with alignment and positioning.

Here is the solution to my word search puzzle:

It would be very easy to make mistakes trying to make a word search puzzle book.

Beta readers would be great for creating a puzzle book, to help you catch important little details. They could also help you create buzz for your book.

There may or may not be demand for such a puzzle book, but if you really love puzzles, you would surely enjoy making the puzzles and sharing them with others.

Write Happy, Be Happy

Chris McMullen

Author of the Improve Your Math Fluency series of math workbooks and self-publishing guides

Puzzle Post: Fun Little Word Game

Gender Puzzle

WORD PUZZLE

Each of these 8 words is disguised.

Their disguises can be uncovered with one common key.

  1. PARQUEEN
  2. GUYLANT
  3. THERS
  4. CHERNEY
  5. MADAMEN
  6. HUNCLE
  7. MISTERION
  8. MAPER

See if you can figure out what these words have in common.

That’s the key to solving this word game.

Spoiler alert.

If you keep scrolling down…

You’ll run into the answers.

So if you don’t want to see the answers and explanation yet…

Scroll back up.

Last chance.

WORD GAME ANSWERS

Here is the answer key.

1. PARKING 2. GALLANT 3. THIS 4. CHIMNEY 5. SIREN 6. HAUNT 7. MISSION 8. PAPER

Here comes the explanation.

This word game is a gender puzzle. Find the gender in the word and switch the gender.

For example, guylant has the word guy in it. Change guy to gal to make gallant.

Similarly, maper has the word ma in it. Change ma to pa to get paper.

Write happy, be happy. 🙂

Chris McMullen

Copyright © 2015

Chris McMullen, Author of 300+ Mathematical Pattern Puzzles and Christmas Word Scrambles

Click here to view my Goodreads author page.

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Comments

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Word Scrambles for Writers

Word Scrambles

Love to write? Enjoy puzzles? Then you might have a little fun unscrambling the letters of these word scramble puzzles.

Rearrange the letters of each puzzle to form an English word that relates to writing.

(1) G-R-E-E-N

(2) I-D-G-O-A-L

(3) S-H-A-P-E-R

(4) I-I-N-O-T-E-D

(5) M-A-R-M-A-R-G

(6) N-O-S-T-I-Q-U-E

(7) C-H-E-A-T-C-A-R-R

(8) C-U-T-E-T-U-N-A-P

If you’d like a little help, first check out the hints below (but if you scroll too far down, you’ll come to the answers).

Hints

  1. Fantasy or romance, for example.
  2. Two people speaking to one another.
  3. Not enough to be a complete sentence.
  4. Many books come in a few of these; it’s especially common with textbooks.
  5. An editor can help you with this.
  6. This one begins with Q.
  7. Every story has several of these.
  8. You can’t write a sentence without doing this, unless your name is ee cummings.

Answers

These are written backwards in case you weren’t ready to read them yet, but happened to catch them with your eye.

  1. erneg
  2. golaid
  3. esarhp
  4. noitide
  5. rammarg
  6. noitseuq
  7. retcarahc
  8. etautcnup

Chris McMullen, author: self-publishing book, word scramble books

Follow me at WordPress, find my author page on Facebook, or connect with me through Twitter.

Cover Reveal for Spooky Word Scrambles

Pageflex Persona [document: PRS0000443_00051]

In the past, I’ve always designed my own covers, and I’ve enjoyed doing so. But I’ve seen so many awesome covers here at WordPress, I wanted to have one like those on my new book, too. That’s a great thing about interacting with other authors here at WordPress: I think we all find a little motivation and some ideas toward improvement.

This cover is far better than I could have done myself. For one, if I have to put a person on my cover, I’m hopeless (a stick figure probably isn’t the way to go). There are some cool effects here that I wouldn’t have thought to try to do, and wouldn’t have been able to pull off if I had. If you hire a cover designer, (at a minimum) you definitely want the result to include features that you couldn’t have done by yourself.

Melissa Stevens at www.theillustratedauthor.net, designed this cover. She has some cool horror covers on her website, and she also designed a cool spooky cursive workbook cover for a friend, July Harper (you can see all of Melissa’s covers by clicking Gallery on her website). So I knew that she would be a good fit to design a spooky, Halloween-themed cover for my book. Melissa also provided several illustrations that were used to decorate the interior (like the one shown below). Even if word scrambles don’t interest you, you might check out the interior in a week or so on Amazon, if you’re curious about how the interior is decorated.

My word scramble books don’t sell as well as many of my other books, but I still feel very good about this cover. I’m very glad to have it on my book. (Of course, my coauthor actually did most of the work on what I just called “my” book.)

We’ve been working on this spooky word scrambles book for a year and several months now. We wanted to release in time for Halloween last year, but when that didn’t happen, we decided to put extra time into it. It’s barely coming out in time for Halloween this year. It should be out later this week. Although the title is Spooky Word Scrambles, many of the puzzles relate to Halloween. I think a cool feature of our word scramble books is the Hints section (separate from the Answers section). Have you ever been stuck on a word jumble, and wanted just a little help without getting the full answer? The hints section gives the first letter of the answer, which helps with this.

Target audience: I mention this frequently in my marketing posts. The focus of my blog is to help authors with self-publishing ideas. The audience for my blog isn’t word scramble lovers. Okay, maybe a couple of you do like puzzles, but definitely, if I’m trying to sell word scrambles, I have a target audience mismatch. I preach all the time that this is a huge problem.

However, I didn’t do this cover reveal to try to sell word scramble books (but I’d also be a fool to beg you to please not buy it). Rather, I thought that my experience of hiring a cover designer may be relevant, and I want to use this cover to make a few points about cover design, which I shall do now.

Cover design:

  • Three colors is a good rule of thumb, often in the ration 6:3:1. This cover follows this fairly well, with a primary green, secondary purple, and accent black. The other colors, used just a little, complement the main three, and at least a fourth color is usually inevitable when using a person or picture on the cover.
  • Text should be interesting, fit the theme, and be highly readable. If you really want to be a picky cover critic, you could complain about readability in the title, but then you’d be awful silly in this case: Since it’s a word scramble book, if you can’t figure out the title, this book probably isn’t for you. 🙂 For most other books, I’d be more cautious before staggering the letters like this. I like the way the author names stand out in the cauldron, and I like the style of this font for the theme, too.
  • There is a danger of making a cover too busy. There are a few things going on here. The biggest question to ask is whether or not it’s distracting. The bats kind of just seem like shadows in the background, so may not distract too much. The bubbles serve a purpose by holding the title letters.
  • The biggest problem is that I have a dozen (or so) word scramble books, but the covers aren’t remotely uniform. It’s not really a series, so to speak, but it would be nice if I had had the foresight to make them fit together in some way. I guess the only solution is to go back in time and hire a cover designer sooner. 🙂 (I guess I could have them redesigned, but then a few customers might accidentally buy the same book again, so I think I’ll just focus on the new covers.)

However, even if you’re not in the target audience, your opinion would be valued. Feel free to disagree with my comments above. Obviously, I’m partial toward this cover; you’re more likely to be objective than I am. If there is anything about the cover that you like or dislike, please share it; I will be grateful for honest feedback.

Here is a sample puzzle, in case you want to enjoy a fun word puzzle while you’re here. As in the book, every word scramble on a page fits a specific theme. So if you’re stuck on a puzzle, knowing that all of the words are related in some way may be helpful.

  • P A C E
  • G S A F N
  • D O B O L
  • K A T E S
  • N O C T U
  • T A Y B T
  • M A P R E V I
  • A L C A R D U

You can find the answers at the very end of the post (below the picture).

Happy Halloween. 🙂

If you haven’t already heard about Read Tuesday, you should check it out.

It’s going to be HUGE!

Give the gift of reading this holiday season.

Chris McMullen, author of A Detailed Guide to Self-Publishing with Amazon and Other Online Booksellers, Vol. 1 (formatting/publishing) and Vol. 2 (packaging/marketing)

Halloween Scrambles Title Page

cape, fangs, blood, stake, count, batty, vampire, Dracula

Dis-a-vowel-ed (A Simple Word Puzzle)

I have a little puzzle for you. Don’t worry, it’s easy. You can figure it out. 🙂

See if you can figure out what the following puzzle says. It’s in English! Really, it is! Following the puzzle is a hint. If you need help, read the hint (but not the answer). When you want to check that you’ve solved the puzzle correctly, then you can check the answer.

PUZZLE

O cen nut omegoni why yua moght nut bi ebli tu andirstend thos!

Ell yua hevi tu du os ripleci iech vuwil woth thi vuwil thet pricidis ot, whiri thi littir ‘a’ pricidis thi littir ‘e’ (will, nut qaoti, bat thet os thi ginirel odie).

Hevi yua gut ot fogarid uat yit?

Thos os yuar lest chenci.

HINT

If you didn’t mean to read this far yet, you better lift your eyes in a hurry!

Ready or not, here comes the hint: Try reading it aloud and you might recognize some of the words. Maybe it wouldn’t be a bad idea to consider the title of this post, too. 🙂

SOLUTION

Here comes the solution. So if you don’t want to read it yet, look up fast. All of the consonants are correct. The vowels are correctly positioned, but each vowel has been changed. More precisely, each vowel was replaced with the vowel that follows it. For example, ‘a’ was replaced with ‘e,’ ‘e’ was replaced with ‘i,’ and so on; also, the ‘u’ was replaced with ‘a.’

For example, the word ‘idea’ becomes ‘odie.’ Note that one sentence from the puzzle has a phrase that reads, “where the letter ‘u’ precedes the letter ‘a,’” in which the ‘u’ changed to ‘a’ and the ‘a’ changed to ‘e.’

I thought about changing the ‘u’ to a ‘y’ and the ‘y’ to an ‘a,’ but only when the ‘y’ makes the vowel sound, but I decided to keep things simple. 🙂

If you had to read the solution to figure out how to solve the puzzle, it isn’t too late to see if you can now translate the puzzle text.

ANSWER

Following is the translation of the puzzle text using the technique described in the solution. Don’t read the following text unless you are ready to check your answer.

I can not imagine why you might not be able to understand this!

All you have to do is replace each vowel with the vowel that precedes it, where the letter ‘u’ precedes the letter ‘a’ (well, not quite, but that is the general idea).

Have you got it figured out yet?

This is your last chance.

Cre8ively Writ10

Looking 4 a different kind of cre8ive poem

2 read on a Friday night while stuck @ home?

Maybe this 1 will @tract your @10tion

or /haps it will only cause you frustr8ion!

This won’t suit every1, so feel free 2 write your own.

1 can only please a %age of the readers; others will groan.

12s will be gr8ful 4 the glossary they can find below.

After th@ is a quiz 4 those who don’t want the fun 2 go.

Glossary:

cre8ive(ly) = creative(ly)

writ10 = written

@tract = attract

@10tion = attention

/haps = perhaps

frustr8ion = frustration

every1 = everyone

%age = percentage

12s = dozens

gr8ful = grateful

th@ = that

Vocabulary Quiz:

ca9

*dom

:ial

“8ion

,&er

Quiz Answers:

canine

stardom

colonial

quotation

commander

Chris McMullen, author of the fictional dialog, Why Do We Have to Go to School?

A New Kind of Word Puzzle

I enjoy rearranging the letters of word scrambles to form words. Sometimes while I was giving physical science exams I would stare at the periodic table and see if I could make words from the symbols. For example, you can make the words CrYPtIC, VErBAl, ThErMoDyNAmICs, BRaIn PoWEr, ThEsAuRuS, and thousands of others. My favorite “chemical word” is ScAtTeRbRaIn — a 12-letter word made from 6 symbols. My coauthor, Carolyn Kivett, and I have published a series of puzzle books featuring chemical words. The first books of this series are called Chemical Word Scrambles, and come in Easy, Medium, and Hard volumes. What we enjoy about these books is that they allow us to use a vocabulary of longer words (compared to ordinary word scrambles) without increasing the difficulty of the puzzle. For example, it’s easier to unscramble the 6 symbols Tb-In-S-Ru-H-Pa to form the chemical word PaInTbRuSH than it is to unscramble the 10 letters t-b-i-n-s-r-u-h-p-a to form the ordinary word paintbrush.

GeArNRaRe ThIW TeUAc InBRa!