Super solid offering from one of the best in the themeless game. Peter starts with an ambitious 16 long slots (entries of 8+ letters), ...
read moreSuper solid offering from one of the best in the themeless game. Peter starts with an ambitious 16 long slots (entries of 8+ letters), and what a start. When you're working with that many long entries, it's tough avoid some of them coming out flat, but I count 12 strong entries. My favorite is ZIPLINES, the next best thing to climbing if you're going to be in a harness. And AL JAZEERA has great Scrabbly letters.

I appreciate how Peter's been working hard to transform his mid-length material into assets as well. WELL OK is a fun one, as is BIG TOP. RON PAUL is another good one, the politician cleverly staking a claim to the anagram. GULLET is not just an amusing and colorful word, but when paired with a clue as great as [Food channel], it's a plus for the puzzle. (Think of "down the gullet!" and channel = a passageway.) I love it when a clue so innocuously deceives.
Of the four longer entries that I thought were neutral, SNAPPED TO stuck out for me. I would usually count that as an asset, painting a vivid picture of a person jolting. But crossing OPTS TO made it feel a bit so-so, and the feeling of angst grew when I encountered TRIED TO and RAN TO. I don't mind these ___ TO, ___ OUT, ___ AT, etc. phrases in moderation — they're awfully handy to solidify a grid — but like Peter noted, four TOs in a 15x puzzle is maybe two too much for four me. Er, for me.
Some other great clues:
- ESSAY is something written by Salon — did you get tripped up by the capital S of Salon cleverly disguised at the beginning of the clue?
- Neat moment of realization, that a NOSY person indeed pays too much interest.
- FRAT PARTY is not only a great entry but the clue made it even better. (Frats get "rushed" by initiates.)
If it were any other person, I might have picked this one for the POW. The four -TOs complaint might seem ticky-tacky, and really, it probably is. But my bar is set higher for Peter's themeless puzzles than for most every other mere mortal.