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Puzzles for May, 2026
with Constructor comments

View these same grids with comments from:
Constructor (3)Editor (2)Jim Horne (7)Hide comments
Fri 5/1/2026
OARSOCCAMSCAN
NEONLOOFALIPO
ARMADILLOSYAPS
LOCKANDLOADALE
OBOESTETOLSEN
GEMSWAGCOASTS
MAKEBELIEVE
SPOILERALERTS
COUPLESONLY
ANNULSOKSAMFM
POSSEMMAATARI
ARTTHEMUNCHIES
BOERERADICATES
LURKACTINNAPE
ESSOTHETADIRS
Sat 5/2/2026
MOONSHOTSFLAT
AUNATURELRARER
STAGENAMEALANA
HINGESPERMABAN
UNDERNOPEEKING
PLODCARSWEAT
SANGENAHORNS
COLORWARS
SHALEYORKBOA
WORDSTOEBAND
LATESTFADDOMED
ILLSTARTRAWBAR
ELISAATMINSIDE
DONERGOBANANAS
WEDSSOANYWAYS
Sun 5/3/2026 What Are the Odds?
ICHCPROKEDSATATOP
MUDHOLEPITATEACHME
ATTUNEDPLASTICSHEETS
GIVESADARNHORSTRATA
INSILEOSEARES
NOEASYTASKSTICKYPADS
ENTRAPSSEWINONA
INREERINNODRAMA
BRIDGETJONESLOWDIGIT
EINSNOGTHRUSAFEST
LEFTAWRYYOREETTE
ISAYSOLEASFILMWES
KENKESEYCHILDSUPPORT
ENTENTEPHYSEZRA
TENHUTACCAORTAL
BARBARIANSTHINKPIECE
ELIAEDTOREACA
AMONRAHEWACCOUNTREP
NOTQUITERIGHTBROCODE
NEUTRALMAMAOBTUSER
DRESSUPPHEWPSAEDS
Mon 5/4/2026
COASTABBAGAPS
OATESFOBSAMAT
CHICKFLICKLENA
OUTLANIONIC
BRICKBYBRICK
ITSLITLUMET
NIKONSCARYRS
CLICKITORTICKET
ALPHUGEMAINE
SATONMOPTOP
PICKUPSTICKS
ADLIBETAWAS
DEANGETSTHEICK
MASTPROMBELAY
ALSOSANEOLDIE
Tue 5/5/2026
GOTOPITCHHOPON
ARALHOOHAIDAHO
LADYFINGERTECHS
LLAMASARAHSKEE
PDFSIMONSAYS
ARTISANMEAN
SHEAKETTLESIDO
HEADLESSHORSEMAN
YAMINTOYOUNARC
MACESNARLED
TRADEWINDSCI
RASHSMEARMCRIB
EMCEENATUREHIKE
ABORTETUDEEPEE
TOTESWOMENDEAF
Wed 5/6/2026
LIEHAMMBRACED
INTRIGUERESALE
BLUEBELLBATMAN
RADIICBDPEONY
AWESMHEVER
ICEHAIRPBJ
ODDNUMBERSPERU
CROSSPOLLINATED
HALTHOLYTOLEDO
OWLVISAOTS
MISTARFADE
METOOSAGOCCAM
ENROLLSOCRATIC
AZALEAPRIMROSE
TOMATOSAGERYE

Florals? For a spring crossword? Groundbreaking.

If you're wondering if The Devil Wears Prada 2 sponsored me for a stealth marketing campaign to promote the recent release of the iconic film sequel in theatres now... sadly no (but my DM's are open, Meryl). I am an internist living in Montréal, and I am thrilled to make my NYT debut today with a puzzle that I hope will make people smile, as we transition from April showers into today's theme!

The idea came from seeing the 15-letter CROSS-POLLINATED in print, and thinking it would be(e) the perfect marquee revealer. I wanted the theme answers to be symmetrical, but when I found the current configuration with words like HOLY TOLEDO (BATMAN!), ODD NUMBERS, NOT FOR ME, and INTRIGUE... well I decided "not to force nature's plan." Sometimes, things are just a bit more beautiful in asymmetry.

Originally, I clued the flowers with literary and pop-culture references like PRIMROSE Everdeen, Iggy AZALEA and Ari ASTER, but the editors brought the puzzle back to botany. It keeps the grid feeling fresh and I learned new things about flowers along the way. For 1-Across (LIE), my original clue was [Many a reason for being late]. My boyfriend's thoughts? "You have trust issues." Well, that clue also got changed and I'm still suspicious that he had something to do with it.

For a more immersive experience, just imagine the flower crosses beaming into colour [sic] once you complete the puzzle, with a NYT Spelling Bee icon pollinating the B-E-E-S circles... or go to the park, you do you. Anyway, I'm still buzzing from the excitement of this puzzle. Buzz buzz.

Miranda Priestly glare

That's all.

Thu 5/7/2026
JAMIEMUGPOET
AGAVEUSESARLO
CARELESSMISTAKE
KIRVCRNAILS
SNORKELINN
WINLESSSEASON
RABBICATEOVA
ILOSTAHASPRIG
TINTRIGKURDS
AGELESSBEAUTY
ARKAMASSES
SAYITECOILL
ENDLESSSTRUGGLE
TAZOKETOAPHID
SPEWWARESTES
Fri 5/8/2026
HATESONATEASE
THERENOWSWANKY
TAXEXILESORTIE
PSTMOORSSLIPS
PANSEARACS
AWMANSORESPOT
CHERUBNASTMOP
TEDTALKNEATENS
INSLOOPTRADES
ICESTORMTRYST
NHLSKIAREA
KROFTSENORKPH
YOOHOOSINKHOLE
IMLATETODIEFOR
VESTEDCATSITS
Sat 5/9/2026
ALCHEMISTSBIRD
MEREMORTALALOO
YOUREEARLYBLOG
SIXERTAKEARFS
GREWSTRATI
PAWNEEBYTECOT
OREOFREEADEPT
KINDASORTAMAYBE
ESTERARILBOAR
RHOSPRYSCOURS
PANEERSKOR
APTSIMHOATOLL
RIOTSCARYMOVIE
TRUEMAKEUPGAME
YORESTEAKSALAD
Sun 5/10/2026 Come Full Circle
ADSSWABFCCCIGIPAD
SUNSHADEWHOOHOSILO
SPACEINVADERMEGAMALL
ALFATOESANTIARTNIL
YOUTHFULINDISCRETIONS
TOONDALEKDERN
LEARREVERESNACL
WHIRRRESDIFCHASM
REFDIASBOWDIETTEE
AREANYTICEBERSBEET
POSTABSSUNBSETANTE
SITENATOLDBADEHIHO
UNOLENONOSLORDGRR
PERSESPFMAGERHUS
YUTZSOILIEDSCAT
CPASDLISTCLAW
ROCKANDROLLHALLOFFAME
EHHSICARIOLEOSIWAS
AWAYTEAMCLOSETHELOOP
DOSESROIMPCHEWELRY
EWESTDSTETHESSSIS

Rachel: I absolutely loved creating this puzzle with Adam, who is a generous, thoughtful, and brilliant constructor, and who kindly did the heavy lifting on figuring out how to make the center of the puzzle work. I am in awe of his theme-brain, and I'm grateful to have had the opportunity to work with him on a puzzle that really challenged me as a constructor. I generally prefer creating grids to writing clues, in part because grids usually have so many more interesting constraints than clues do, including rules requiring symmetry and all-over interlock. With this puzzle, however, we broke both of those rules (though not at the same time!) while piling on the tightest cluing constraint I've ever faced — by far the most fun I've ever had writing crossword clues!

Adam: Pop quiz — what percent of words in the English language do you think contain either an O or a C? I guessed ~18%. Turns out it's over 60%! Originally, that stat spooked me. I said to Rachel, "look, I think writing over 130 natural-sounding non-thematic clues without being able to use O or C is just impossible. What if we get stuck with a proper noun like CHEADLE that we have to clue without 'actor' or 'movie' or 'Don'? Or if we have to debut DALEK without being able to say 'Doctor Who' or BBC? Let's just make this as a Thursday."

But that's the thing about Rachel — not only is she an endlessly creative constructor (for more proof, go solve her '6/1' USA Today, or her 2022 Times collab with our shared bff Rebecca Goldstein), she's also the best kind of collaborator: someone who pushes you to be better. She immediately replied with the brilliant grid-spanning clue/answer combo at 32-Across. I was all-in from that moment on.

Both of us: One last thing — not only was this puzzle incredibly fun to clue — it was also a blast to title. There were SO MANY good options: Circle Back, Raiders of the Lost Arc, Getting the Band Back Together, Nothing To C Here. If you have any fun ones you can think of, come find us on crosscord!

Mon 5/11/2026
DERLLAMAAIMED
AXEGABONSWEAR
BILLBOARDCHARTS
BLOATSSEVEN
LEADFESSTHAW
EDDYTILPOACH
HORSDOEUVRE
ACQUITSUMPTEEN
SOUNDSTAGES
AMAZENUNCHOP
PEDISTOPHAHA
PLAITTHIRDS
DROPINTHEBUCKET
JADEDLEASTEAR
SHEDSERUPTDRY
Tue 5/12/2026
STARTFEELEWES
OILEROGLEVEST
FLAVOUROFTHEDAY
ALSMRSENSUE
ABDUCTORS
COLOURINGBOOKS
JAMINESTEPEA
ORATEDELITES
INNERSTOPENS
NEIGHBOURHOODS
OUTBREAKS
DWELLMILFAT
OHYOUAREBRITISH
DERNBILLKAFKA
ONEGCOKEEXIST
Wed 5/13/2026
TAXISRSERDOCS
AXONPEAPARROT
PLUSSIGNATEASE
SETTEASEALMA
DOLLARSYMBOL
STEEPSMEET
LAVACHINAINU
OPENPARENTHESIS
GASABASEWOKE
TCBYSPOKES
QUESTIONMARK
ULTANEATOILL
ANUBISSHIFTKEY
RADIUMTANVEER
TRENDSSLYSAKE

I'm excited to be back for my 2nd crossword, especially on a later day than my Mon debut and with a trickier theme. The idea for the theme came from noticing that multiple keyboard symbols could make for interesting fill, and exploring how there could be cluing tied to the number of the same key.

It's always nerve wracking to have a nascent theme you like and research whether it has been done before. The construction tool Crosserville at least makes this investigative work easier. I'm not the only creator to publish a puzzle with a SHIFT KEY revealer. There was a 2012 NYT puzzle that used numbers in the grid, which read in one direction as the shifted character in a longer phrase. And a 2016 LAT puzzle with clues where shifted symbols replaced numbers, like &$& instead of 747. Both are also clever executions of the theme. I felt like mine with the symbols fully spelled out in the grid was sufficiently unique, and I'm glad the NYT editing team agreed!

I'm also encouraged that my cluing skills are improving. In my first NYT puzzle, the published version used my clues identically or with a small adjustment on 82% of the answers. With this one, it was up to 95%.

It was still too bad to lose a couple clues I really liked. Paired clues "Bike wheel component" for SPOKES and AXLE, and similarly "Sports bar array" for TAPS and TVS. And my original "Swimwear line" for TAN. But I appreciate that the editing team listened to my pitches for the clues and explained their rationale for the final versions.

Thu 5/14/2026
SCARPSLIDPSI
ALLMEUMAMIOHM
COLORPHOTOSTAO
STANDINGHHMARK
TITOROUTE
ONTHEHHCANNONS
DEISMFIATISTO
DEMSMITTENKIN
EDENARCOEKING
RETAINSHHWINGS
DRACODUST
RAINHHPITCHERS
ASAIHEARTRADIO
GALNORSEERICA
UPSGEOSWATER
Fri 5/15/2026
HILTLIVEWIRES
OMENBANANASEAT
MATTAPECOSTUME
ELMELIZAHOSEA
CLEAVESNITESL
HEADEDSTRUM
EATINBELABORS
FREDTAGONDOES
SMASHCUTBEGAT
SHAKETELUGU
GMCEWWCISTERN
READEOGRESWAN
ITSUPTOYOUCAPE
NEEDLEDROPOVER
DRYSEASONMESS
Sat 5/16/2026
URLSSCRIMWREN
COATPHONESHOME
LUNALITTLEOLME
ANDYKIMWATTLED
DEBATECONTESTS
MEDAYSHAGEL
AMOCODICERLID
NUUKFEATSMANI
EPTSEEPSZARFS
COUPEVIRGOS
SECONDSTRINGER
TRAVAILEXCISED
RIVERSEINENOVA
EVENSTEVENADEN
PODSSPEWSLARK
XWord Info Home
XWord Info © 2007-2026, Jim Horne
44 ms