I'm a huge fan of mirror symmetry. Something about it appeals to my sensibilities — perhaps it's some primal echo to the left-right ...
read moreI'm a huge fan of mirror symmetry. Something about it appeals to my sensibilities — perhaps it's some primal echo to the left-right symmetry of the human body? It's not for everyone, a few people telling me how much they hate it. More accurately, how it pains every fiber of their existence. As for editors, Mike Shenk at the WSJ dislikes it, Rich Norris at the LAT enjoys it, Will Shortz appreciates it but abhors up-down symmetry. Hard to please everyone!
I appreciated this FISHHOOK concept as a "starter Thursday." A friend of mine recently got obsessed with the NYT XW, and she confidently gets to Wednesday but is intimidated by Thursdays. I'll point her to this one and see how she does. The fish bending into fishhook shapes isn't a difficult concept to suss out, but it sure produces a pretty visual.
I thought they'd be ridiculously easy to fill in after GOLDEN SPIKE. No sir! I read [Drink that might be served with a metal cup] and confidently filled in MOSCOW MULE. (From a non-fisherman perspective, if perch and sole and char are fish, mule probably is too? Doesn't it all taste like chicken, anyway?) Great misdirect away from MILKSHAKE.
I was only vaguely aware of the UPANISHADs but it helped a lot that I knew the last four letters had to be some type of fish. I don't like being forced to learn things when I simply want to be entertained, but the crossings are fair. I would have preferred PHYLICIA RASHAD because she was so incredible in "Creed," but I imagine a lot of Hindu solvers will delight in seeing UPANISHAD in their crossword.
I prefer trickier, harder-to-figure-out Thursday themes — not including FISH / HOOK and leaving me to figure out the concept might have increased my fun — but there's merit in providing a wide spectrum, including ones that might hook (sorry) people looking to break into tough Thursday territory. Well-executed grid — especially around those hooks that take away flexibility in filling — and an aesthetically pleasing one, at that. At least, for us left-righters. Sorry, 180-normative and diagonalites.