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Ben Zoon author page

1 puzzle by Ben Zoon
with Jeff Chen comments

TotalDebut
13/29/2023
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
0001000
ScrabDebutFresh
1.63767%
Ben Zoon
View these same grids with comments from:
Constructor (1)Jeff Chen (1)Hide comments

See the 7 answer words debuted by Ben Zoon.

Puzzles constructed by Ben Zoon by year
Wed 3/29/2023
AMUSEIMACSTAP
NOFUNNACHORUE
DOORLATCHESAGE
FARHEAPEDUP
DATACAPSPACERS
BRACELETIDOS
ARCEDRIDESCPA
COOSPOLISTHEN
KWHCITEDFRONT
OCHOROGUEONE
SOLVENTKNEELED
PADSEEEWALP
AREREDHOTCOALS
DERORDERASYET
EDSNSYNCNEEDY

Anagrams have a long and rich history. Given that anagrams and crosswords both involve placing letters in various orders, they make a natural pairing.

Since crossword anagrams have been around since the Maleskan days, it's essential to do something to elevate your theme. Anagram-based crosswords have been forced to grow and evolve to keep the genre fresh. Our last two featured descriptions of movies that anagram into the titles and a word in the clue that, when anagrammed, perfectly describes the grid entry.

TACO HOLDERS is a fun phrase. I've never used one, but look how fun they can be! Maybe my ultra-picky kids would even try tacos if served from them. (Zero chance.) That such a long entry rearranges into another great phrase, RED HOT COALS, is neat.

But is a simple pair of anagrams enough to lift this crossword from the anabyss? There have been dozens of anagram pairs themes

Wait. It also anagrams into TRADE SCHOOL?

And DOOR LATCHES?

Okay, now you've latched my attention.

The coder in me wants to determine how many other "letter banks" can form four solid phrases. I'd code it up if I weren't so busy figuring out what to make for dinner that my kids won't spurn.

I hope solvers follow the cross-referencing in the clues closely enough to figure out that it's not just two anagram pairs but an anagram quartet. I bet laying out all the themers horizontally instead of in the "windmill" pattern would have helped, so the referenced clue numbers could continually increase in a progression rather than having a haphazard feel of seemingly jumping around to random Across and Down numbers.

Neat discovery, so appropriate for a software engineer's debut.

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