viii homology groups. A weaker result, sufficient nevertheless for our
purposes, is proved in Chapter 5, where the reader will also find some
discussion of the need for a more powerful in- variance theorem and a
summary of the proof of such a theorem. Secondly the emphasis in this
book is on low-dimensional examples the graphs and surfaces of the title
since it is there that geometrical intuition has its roots. The goal of
the book is the investigation in Chapter 9 of the properties of graphs
in surfaces; some of the problems studied there are mentioned briefly in
the Introduction, which contains an in- formal survey of the material of
the book. Many of the results of Chapter 9 do indeed generalize to
higher dimensions (and the general machinery of simplicial homology
theory is avai1able from earlier chapters) but I have confined myself to
one example, namely the theorem that non-orientable closed surfaces do
not embed in three-dimensional space. One of the principal results of
Chapter 9, a version of Lefschetz duality, certainly generalizes, but
for an effective presentation such a gener- ization needs cohomology
theory. Apart from a brief mention in connexion with Kirchhoff's laws
for an electrical network I do not use any cohomology here. Thirdly
there are a number of digressions, whose purpose is rather to illuminate
the central argument from a slight dis- tance, than to contribute
materially to its exposition.