This web browser is not supported. Use Chrome, Edge, Safari, or Firefox for best results.

Thumbnails

Puzzles for January, 2014
with Constructor comments

Wed 1/1/2014
ERNESTVICCHIC
GEISHAOWEOONA
BUROAKCOSNATL
ENVREBASHERRY
RIAPAULINASUP
TONOENDTARGETS
NATIANSDONHO
HAPPY2014
CAVEREELSIRT
HEIRESSAUSTERE
IRAWATUTSICIA
MADMENBEAMIRR
ETUIDUONEATEN
ROCKAKANONAME
ARTELETANGLED

It's an honor to have the first puzzle of the new year. It's perhaps a bit unusual to have a rebus puzzle on a Wednesday, but here it is. And I guess this puzzle couldn't run on any other day but January 1.

I think 2014 uses all the digits that have homophones, other than 8/ate, and that's if one is willing to allow "oh" to stand for "zero". I'm sure some will take exception to that bit of cruciverbalistic license.

The grid was a bit difficult to fill, primarily because of the side-by-side-by-side-by-side themed entries. What you're seeing is the second incarnation of the puzzle. Will asked me to rework my original version. That version contained some rather ugly fill, such as ROYG and TEENTSY.

Happy New Year to all!

Thu 1/2/2014
IBARSALLAFLAT
RECAPDUOMOOCH
MACHINESVARACE
ARENOLTETONER
UPLATECHINESE
OPTICSSHAVERS
DOETHMOIRES
ANDIWALLMEMUS
GEAREDPLANK
FRANCISDEFTLY
GLUTTONDEAFTO
ROSIEACORNROE
ORSONTHERULESB
FEINTEARTOSEA
ETAPEDIRSASSY

I first tried this puzzle on Peter Gordon in March of 2012. He liked the theme idea, but didn't like that every theme entry would take the same form. I tried sending it to Will in July of 2012: he liked the idea more, just asking me to improve the fill in places. After a couple of resubmissions, he accepted this puzzle the same day (in the same e-mail, in fact) as David's and my recent Crossword Centennial puzzle.

I don't remember where the idea came from, but I was really glad I could use 51 Across as a theme revealer (my original clue was "Taking liberties ... as with this puzzle's theme"). I'm also interested in seeing how 8 Down will be clued: a straight (if somewhat racy) definition, or a reference to the 45 year old hit song? Also, I couldn't resist referencing Stan Newman's book Cruciverbalism to clue 52 Down...I'm guessing that clue will be changed.

Fri 1/3/2014
PETITFOURYAWPS
IRONHORSEENIAC
DONNAREEDSEPIA
GIGSEGRETWENT
ICUWVAEWEOFT
NAEYENMIXTURE
ACROSTPETER
MOTHSTENSE
GANNETTBEDS
NICOLAIERIBAH
ONOMMMAVARAY
CRUZPENNECAFE
CORESLIBRARIAN
HASTYANASTASIA
IDEALGOGETTERS

BARRY: TWITTERVERSE was the seed here. I also thought EXPEDIA would make a good Scrabbly entry, despite it being a brand name. We went through a few drafts before settling on the published grid. The first attempt used TIMEOUTS in the NE corner, which had to be changed because we eventually incorporated TIMELAG into the SW. So Brad replaced TIMEOUTS with WIPEOUTS and made some other changes to the NE. There were a couple of other words I wanted to use in the puzzle that would have been debuts for the NYT, but they had to be removed for other reasons. I thought LIBRARIAN would be fitting for the puzzle given Brad's profession. He clued the Downs and I did the Acrosses.

BRAD: Barry sent me a sizable section with his two nice seeds, plus a nice shout-out to my day job! I was merely glad to be able to make my own 12-letter seed work with a fairly nice stack of 9s. If memory serves me, I think we both did some tweaking to the corners with the shorter stacks. Using WYCH ELM reminds me of the second or third puzzle I ever did with Doug Peterson, where he used a variant spelling and we got by with it. I didn't know either spelling existing before that time! And I don't know if we're the first clue-writers to reference Hitchcock for 2-Down, but it may be a fresh angle for many solvers. I may have used that clue in one of my online self-edited puzzles.

Sat 1/4/2014
ASIANDJPAULYD
CONDOGREATBEAR
TUTORLATCHONTO
USERMINSKADEN
PARKRANGERTASE
VAULTTAB
CRABBIERTIPPLE
POLLODOSGRAIN
ROSEUPTEETERED
TACALOFT
ARCSTHECAPITOL
MOOTDIXONGIVE
AUDITORIALUMEN
STONEWALLARENT
SENTENCEVERSO

This is my third Times puzzle, and the first to appear on a Saturday. When I constructed this puzzle in late 2012, MTV's "Jersey Shore" was still a big pop culture phenomenon, and the show had been referenced a couple times already in the Times crossword. I realized that nobody had used DJ PAULY D as an entry and I thought it would make a good themeless seed because of the interesting letter arrangement, especially the DJP trio. To my chagrin, "Jersey Shore" concluded its run after I submitted the puzzle, so some solvers may find the entry a bit dated — them's the breaks.

Often when I make themeless puzzles, I put in one or two 15-letter entries, but in this puzzle I wanted my grid design to highlight 9- and 10-letter entries. I was happy to be able to get in answers like ADORKABLE, THE CAPITOL, PARK RANGER, and STONEWALL without compromising much of the shorter fill. Finally, CODON puts a nice personal touch on the puzzle, since I'm a biochemist in my day job.

Sun 1/5/2014 CLUED IN
SUSPECTDEFROOMPOORAT
THEREARENLALDATOPEKA
ESTELLEPOIVIDIEXILED
TIMEDOUTEVENERNALA
AMAZESISNTLAREDOTEXAS
FEVERDEICEEDO
FAILLETTERALIENATTACK
ALASKANSRESTCORDON
BITAUTOBUSATTHATIDLE
LEOTRIDENTCELERYALIA
ERRTANAGEREMERILLEND
WEAPONORGYSILENTBHAD
ALBANOPOREONATEAREGO
CLARETELISMISSSCARLET
SANEVALLEYATTYSNADIA
DEFENSIVEEDGING
SNOURNNESINTHELOUNGE
CONVEYINGNORUNS
ANSELMOPERAMIGOFIRST
LAHRUMPIREWITHTHEROPE
AMISCRENNAANOEUROVAN
REPOHISSEDYENSENNETT

The first puzzle I ever sent to the New York Times was so God-awful it's amazing Will Shortz didn't tell his people to throw anything else from me right in the trash. Check this beauty out:

Clue: _X_VMDCCIIII (16,704)

Answer: MXLIIIITIMESXVI

Hoo boy … Anyway, over the next year and a half things got better and better, yet I still received those emails from Paula Gamache ending "He did appreciate seeing these, tho." Then about a year ago Will wrote that he liked a Sunday of mine but wanted to talk about it on the phone as there was just too much to discuss in an email. So I got to talk to Will Shortz, which was quite a thrill! He told me he "liked the puzzle or we wouldn't be talking now" and went over two or three things he'd like changed to improve it. After a few weeks I emailed him the new puzzle with the changes he'd requested and got a reply that the theme now looked solid but he had issues with some of the fill in the southeast and southwest grids. After re-doing those two grids yet again, BANG, my first puzzle accepted (though third to see publication).

I'm very curious to see what Will did with the southeast grid. As I wrote to him, I wanted that section to be so difficult that without knowing the answers to the Clue accusation not even fastest-solver-in-the-universe Dan Feyer could solve it in under 10 minutes; yet with the answers to the Clue accusation entered (around 35% of that grid) it would become typical Sunday-hard. I felt this was necessary because, if people were able to figure out the accusation by solving the SE quadrant before the other three, then what was the point of the puzzle? I wanted solving the other three before the SE to be of paramount importance.

Mon 1/6/2014
OBEYSRIDESKIP
HAVOCEMIRMESA
MNIGHTSHYAMALAN
SELANEOALLOT
MBUTTERFLY
GOKARTLEIGAM
ANITALEILARPI
VCRSXACTOTEAL
ELKMERGETHERE
LEGINAPLENTY
IAMAMERICA
AMBLEBINLAUD
VISFORVENGEANCE
ELOIAIRSEMILE
RENEGATEROMAN

I normally can handle 60 theme squares, but this one was a bit challenging. Probably because the limited supply of M * & V * candidates & the exact MMXIV order the theme demands. I just could not come up with a cleaner lower right corner.

Happy New Year!

Tue 1/7/2014
SACSJIMIVODKA
HULUFROSITRIP
ODINKILLERBEES
GEODENTESTSLO
INSANEASYLUMS
ETCAUST
RBIRADICALSIGN
ARNOREDOSEZIO
WICKEDWITCHEFT
TURNAAA
BADMOONRISING
BOAWAHOORIDER
ISTHISGOODAIRE
FLEASOLIONOVA
FOSSEDALISTET
Wed 1/8/2014
BYOBSPURPARSE
ROVEOGLEETAIL
AHEMBATHSPONGE
TORIIRATBONN
THINGAMABOBUFO
YOTEAMOPASTOR
OTICSHORE
NICKELODEON
NIECETOMB
ORWELLBLINKAT
SKITIMESSQUARE
ESSAMENSTREP
BOSSYPANTSJANE
AMUSELUAUOTOE
GEENAYIPEBETS

Sam:

To my knowledge, this is the first puzzle I'd ever had accepted by the New York Times, so it has a special place in my heart. I fell upon this kid-friendly theme after multiple attempts of trying to satisfy Vic with good theme ideas; even though I was merely a newbie at this point, I had a good feeling about this one's development. Sure enough, my mentor gave me a thumbs-up, and we proceeded with construction. Vic was excellent at explaining grid design, and guided me through creating an initial grid, fill, and clues to submit to Will. Months later, Will requested a revision, so Vic designed a new grid with fill and sent it over to me. I tweaked the fill (especially in the bottom right) and clued the puzzle. Vic revised my clues, and the rest is history! It's been a pleasure working with Vic and I can't thank him enough for his mentorship.

Vic:

Sam's right — and he's talented and has been a joy to work with. He was 16 when he made this puzzle. I'd been mentoring him for a few weeks. He developed the theme. I helped a bit on construction and fill. We submitted it Feb. 17, 2012. At that time FANCY PANTS was in the theme rather than BOSSYPANTS.

On June 26, 2012, Will told us the theme needed a "revealer of some sort." We went back to the drawing board and emerged with NICKELODEON across the center of the revised product. On March 25, 2012, Sam had a solo-byline Sunday puzzle in the Los Angeles Times. Also, while we were revising SPONGEBOB, we were at work on a themeless that appeared in the Times on July 28, 2012.

Thu 1/9/2014
ZIPSMESINTEL
ASEAUTASNOONE
PLAYTONHDIRGE
PECBANAIESTER
ASHTONNNAPEEL
FOOTEDYET
DRUBSARRHESUS
OOZEBRELOQUAY
ENZYMEAACUBED
ATMSBROAD
PATCHOFADLIBS
SARAHRAICEVAT
PROTOSUTEJIBE
ESSENELEREDEN
DEERETMSBELT

My 4-year-old son is very into earthquakes and volcanos. Always on the lookout for crossword theme, I was idly counting letters in the book we were reading and was excited to discover that SAN ANDREAS FAULT was 15 letters. It wasn't long after that that this radical theme occurred to me. I'll leave it to the reader's imagination how the puzzle was constructed (hint: it wasn't too bad).

Because the theme affects so much of the puzzle, I tried to make both the entries and cluing easier than you would expect for a Thursday. I expect I undershot the mark, and Will has made some of the clues more difficult.

POW Fri 1/10/2014
ACCENTKASDAN
TRALEETRIPOLI
MURDERCHILLOUT
SIDEDISHESARMS
SPRYCENSUS
WELLCRACKSHOT
ISAYOATERSNAG
SHYOPTSFORELM
PIEMACHOSHIKE
PREACHERSEDEN
INAPETDEAD
EGGSBATHPILLOW
PRINTADSOCTAVE
PIGEONSSTAKED
SPARTATAPERS
Sat 1/11/2014
CANADABLUEGRASS
TRADITIONALIRAS
NAVALENGAGEMENT
STEMLESSGLASSES
LAYHIES
CDRSKISOSPAD
RAIDRAPSNEALE
INNOWAYITSALOT
SIGMAORZORENO
POSSUMOERSEX
KERTSAT
OBSCENEGESTURES
POTASSIUMIODIDE
ELEPHANTTRAINER
DENTALASSISTANT

This puzzle started with the bottom stack, a lonely orphaned 4x15 sitting in my file of unfinished projects. The problem was that any potential top stack was going to be quite restricted, by the symmetry created by the bottom stack. After a couple of months, I decided to try the ultimate stack-maker's "cheat": loading up the bottom row with esses. So after grappling with my conscience for a full three or four nano-seconds, I hit upon STEMLESS GLASSES. If most of the Downs (through the top stacks) had not been rock-solid (with the sole exception of CTNS) I would have abandoned the STEMLESS GLASSES route and gone back to the drawing board. Larger grid version

This, as is so often the case, created a whole new set of problems: I couldn't for the life of me get the centre of the puzzle to work, unless I enlarged the grid and made it a 15x16. To make matters worse, PALESTRINA had to extend into a relatively obscure Haydn opera LA CANTERINA.

And finally, what I needed was a good LOGS??? entry to match a potential ???GUTS at the bottom. Unfortunately I had a mental block, thinking of only computer-related LOGS OUT, LOGS OFF, etc. Finally it dawned on me that those LOG SHIPS that sail up and down the (Juan de Fuca) strait less than a 1/2 mile from my house might come in useful (I live in British Columbia; major export = logs)!

Keen-eyed observers will notice that I've developed an obsession with circus elephants. Last month, I gave you TRAINED ELEPHANT, and today it's ELEPHANT TRAINER. I'd love to say this is a super-duper circus theme that'll run though my themeless puzzles, but alas, I cannot. These puzzles were constructed over two years apart, with dozens of other puzzles written and published in between, so the mini-dupe caught me by surprise when I noticed it a few days ago (that's my excuse and I'm sticking to it!).

Finally a shout out to Kevin Der for paving the way back in 2010, by getting the whole double-quad-stack thing going. Coincidentally CTNS was also a stack-crossing entry in Kevin's pioneering puzzle. So you can think of CTNS as my tribute to Kevin Der, or maybe just a poor 4-letter fill word I'm desperately trying to justify using!

Anyway, I hope you'll find the rest of this puzzle, minus the circus elephants, trainers, and CTNS an enjoyable and challenging solve!

Sun 1/12/2014 IT'S ONLY "A" GAME
DEWARFLOWCHAPMALE
EXILERARELABANIMAL
CASABLANCAFALALALALA
OMENONESCANTODDSON
ATOZNEALSSMEE
TABLETBOLTSSTARWARS
BLADECLUCESARBOT
SOFATHATCHONUPERDE
PETCHOCULAIDDODAHL
ASHEKROSSMETRICAL
AMANAPLANACANALPANAMA
RAWONIONKAMENIPAD
CRAWTUDETOADIESABS
HIRESITSCARATSABLE
ENDSATCHELSENRON
RASTAMANICOSAISAACS
UTESSLANTSMOG
ADORESPAINEGPARAJA
MAGNACARTABALACLAVAS
PYROMANIAICESAMICI
MOENLIMNTEEMOSAKA

Last year, I was creating a game called "May Own A's," for the 57th Equinox word-game party in Berkeley. (That party's theme was condiments, naturally.) When I found that glorious 21-letter "backward-gram," I knew it was meant to be a Sunday Times puzzle instead. The idea of the theme extending to the clues themselves felt fresh enough to take seriously.

This was the first crossword I ever sent to Will, so I wanted it to be unimpeachable. Thus: many, many versions and revisions. Tyler Hinman graciously provided many rounds of feedback — laser-focusing me on clean, fresh, quality fill — and convinced me over and over to kill my darlings, in order to root out yucky partials and other woeful entries.

In one version, the SW corner had OBIWAN and YODA, which I desperately wanted to link to my STAR WARS entry elsewhere... Had to kill it. A later version had SHORTZ there instead — meta! — but it crossed with the unspeakable OGPU. Tried a few full-pangram versions, but the fill suffered. Knocked the puzzle down from 142 words to 140, removing 8 blocks in the process.

The theme clues I submitted to Will were ornately A-laden constructions. The STAR WARS clue was the much-geekier "Cash-fat astral saga that has J.J. Abrams (and lacks Khan and Data)." Since J.J. is a puzzle nut, I thought the shout-out would be cool. The BALACLAVAS clue featured Slavs, Tatars, and Kazakhs; the SAND MANDALA clue went to Dharamsala. Will rightly streamlined them — sometimes down to a single, tantalizing word. I trust the Master's instincts completely.

I think my favorite clues are the ones that work in meta-wordplay, like the A MAN...PANAMA clue, which includes another A-only palindrome ending in a country, or those two A-only ANAGRAMS. It felt a bit like George Perec's lipogrammatic novel A Void, where translator Gilbert Adair whipped up an E-less version of "The Raven" ("Blackbird, by Arthur Gordon Pym") and other "highly familiar madrigals." Finding famous A-only films (and a British TV show!) that actually won BAFTA Awards was satisfying as well.

Some other wordplay clues that didn't make it in: "Where Skilling made a killing" (ENRON) is a beheadment; "It turns chefs into chiefs" (AN I); etc. The puzzle's final clue ("Vientiane native") is a letter-bank, for all you NPL-ers.

POW Mon 1/13/2014
OFFERPLUSCOP
NOLTEEONSEROS
TREATPHONECALL
HAWIOTAVILLA
ESSRHONEVALLEY
GOOSESAIDYDS
ONLYSERIES
GONEBALLISTIC
CALMLYERAS
FARSOBFAMINE
STONEWALLEDSIP
TOMEIOUZOHST
ONEANDALLPASTE
PARTACLUTWEET
LOOBESSSEARS

This was a relatively easy puzzle to do once the idea struck. I do remember regretting the need to scrap MONEYBALL, because I didn't want to repeat the B-A-L-L of BALLISTIC — and that was too good to part with. Also, the BALL half would have been too similar to CALL and WALL.

With themes like this, I like it when the pronunciation of the key word(s) changes. That was a plus for RHONE VALLEY, which admittedly rates rather low on the "fun" scale.

I see that Will changed quite a few of the clues, generally making them more straightforward. Yes, it's Monday. His clue redo that I especially like is for 33-Across. A number sequence there definitely has more flair than the "Sitcom, say" clue I submitted.

Tue 1/14/2014
JIVEJAZZHOKUM
UBERAGEEACURA
MARSINNSDERAT
PRATTLETWADDLE
ROWBMTA
HOTAIRANDRAPS
ADOUTGLASSNAT
BILGEROTTRIPE
ILLRHONEREGAL
TESHIKEBUSHWA
AOKYARN
BLATHERHOGWASH
LEFTSATYAECHO
ATRIANSECBLIN
HOOEYTOSHBUNK

Now, this may come as a surprise, but I rather like all the colorful ways in which the English language allows its speakers to express themselves. This puzzle, to me, is a prime example of not only the diverse nature of English, but also the old truism that language is a reflection of culture. Namely, in the case of this puzzle, humanity has seen nonsense in everyday life so often that they have to keep making up words for it to keep from being bored of describing it.

I know it seems that the fill is a little constrained because of the sheer amount of theme content, but I put a lot of constraints on myself from the outset and, I think, minimized the junk given the number of theme squares. I moved the various theme answers around a lot — a LOT — and tried a few other words that just didn't make the cut (TRASH, RUBBISH, GARBAGE, BOSH being some of them) because of the effect they had on the fill. (8 pairs of theme answers mean a lot of permutations!) The only words that I didn't move around much were JIVE and JAZZ, because terminal J's and V's severely limit the options in a grid where my options were already considerably limited. Those two stayed where they were from the start of construction.

On the whole, I was so enamored of all these synonyms for "nonsense" that I felt like I had to wedge as many as I could into this puzzle ... even at the expense of going over the max word count significantly. It was a bit of a gamble to do that, but I'm glad that Will didn't see past all that nonsense.

Wed 1/15/2014
JACOBCODABABA
AROMAASAPAFEW
GEOGRAPHYBSTAR
SAPBLEATPIETY
LATHOSIER
EMBEROWNUPNSC
VOLTAIREMEMOIR
ADAMONLYUAONE
DECEITLIPSYNCS
ELKBADGEHATES
ERASELOON
FOYERCADRECUE
EVENCARIBBEANC
MADDONINOWETO
ALPSSTAGXENON
Thu 1/16/2014
HOGADAMLARSON
ANECDOTEAMANDA
CANOEISTDOTEON
KNEWTEEDICERS
REFARFHRS
STARESLACES
CATSUPGODOT
HOEDOTTEDIREA
PAIRSUNBELT
BELLAPEOPLE
VANPJSDRE
DOTAGEATMZAHN
AIMLOWYOUDOTOO
PLATTENUTRIENT
SANYOSETTUDEE
Fri 1/17/2014
SHOREHOTELBARS
MOPEDANIMALFAT
ONELSSANITARIA
GENIEASIRECALL
GYMCLASSESKIEL
IBISMEIRTODDS
EEKBOASFOP
REENACTLISSOME
OTOMANSPAY
SAABSLEVIJAKE
ARGODIMESTORES
BEETHOVENRATSO
ONTHEMENDANION
TOWELETTEINSUM
STORMDOORLATTE

I am a perfectionist. My mind fixates on anything suboptimal. When constructing a puzzle, this habit can be helpful as hundreds of judgements are made — whether a partial is worth it, are there too many plurals in the grid, etc. And since a submission can be rejected for a single flaw — e.g. one entry is deemed too obscure — diligence is needed. The trap is that the mind can go too far in this direction, dwelling on the smallest imperfection while forgetting the merits. I once spent days agonizing over a themeless with a single entry I disliked — FDR — before I came to my senses.

The company I work at is researching methods for peer feedback. We learned the greatest factor in whether a team is thriving and successful is the ratio of positive to negative feedback. The best teams used 5x as many positive comments to negative — while average teams only used 2x. Sometimes the human brain works in unintuitive ways. Since then, I've tried to apply the 5x to rule to myself when constructing. It's helped me remain objective about imperfections while still remembering the merits. I've found myself happier and more motivated to construct. As is commonly said, perfection is impossible to achieve.

Onto the puzzle. I became interested in 4-stacks while observing Patrick Berry's puzzles (even his 5-stacks are smooth) and wondered if mere mortals could do it. Began at the top right corner with 6-A and 16-A as fresh entries. 18-A is a plural not ending in S, which adds some nice misdirection. 11-D was a serendipitous discovery for BLACKO??. And I liked some other lively entries in the grid. But I wish I could change KIEL. While not totally obscure — it hosted Olympics events as recently as 1972 — many people won't know it. I personally didn't. For a painful time I considered scrapping the entire corner because of it. Now I feel the grid as a whole is good enough to accept it. Hopefully, solvers will get the crossings and be satisfied by learning a word. Finally, I noticed that Will kept many of my favorite clues, but also changed some to make the puzzle easier. It's helpful to know my instinct is writing clues that are a bit too difficult. Overall, I'd like to improve several entries, but the result is okay and I hope the next is better, even though it will be imperfect.

ADDED NOTE: This puzzle was used in the 2014 MIT Mystery Hunt.

Sat 1/18/2014
BANANAGRAMSUSM
ADOBEREADERGEE
TIJUANATAXIGAG
EDITERASABRA
SAVCLUTCHSOON
SETHPALOPOUF
AECTERZETTO
ILOVELAFAIRSEX
FACEPALMENS
IVARREUPGEEZ
DARNACROSSRAG
ITISIDIPWANE
DONTAXONOMISTS
IRAEJECTORSEAT
TYSSASHAFIERCE

I was inspired to build this Saturday puzzle after reading so many blog comments complaining that my puzzles were too easy. NO JIVE ... not! My true inspiration for constructing this puzzle back in April 2012 was that I had a bunch of 11-letter seed entries I wanted to put into a crossword grid, which included BANANAGRAMS, ADOBE READER, and TIJUANA TAXI. I also had a sizable number of 8-letter entries that seemed fresh, my favorites of which were UGG BOOTS and MEGAN FOX.

My original submission contained the entry TINIE TEMPAH (a British rapper) at 60-Across, which Will felt wouldn't be familiar to the majority of solvers. So I reworked the lower half of my puzzle and ended up with a stack I felt was superior to the original. I particularly loved EJECTOR SEAT and SASHA FIERCE, though I also really liked I LOVE LA, FACEPALM, and IF I DID IT.

The long entries did necessitate the duplication of I in the lower left and a few "meh" entries — I found SRIS, ITES, and SAV particularly irksome — though I was (and still am) happy with how the fill turned out. My favorite clue/entry pair is "Professional organizers?" for TAXONOMISTS, though I also love Will's new clue for TAVERNS ("Round houses?"). I hope you enjoy my puzzle!

Sun 1/19/2014 OLDEN GOLDIES
SCARABSHOULDABEAPAL
PAPAYAHARPOONENTIRE
ICITETHEWRONGSATTEST
ETAAHABNEGSCRIBES
LINTYRAFTERINTHELANE
MELANIESEARALIA
ATEASEGNCNODEDOT
TANNINSSHESSOHIGH
ABCRITZSNAPSTRANDS
LOOSNUITTIASZEROIN
ORDERDOWNEDHOGTENSE
SEEREDNEARNCOSSWEE
STRIVESEVERKALEOAR
FUNWINEDAYDIVERSE
DRUEGANJOEMELDED
ROSATOGOAGREERS
YOURHEATINCHARTYACHT
STATISTJEUATITHOO
AFLOATMADBOONERISING
LOLITAANGEREDIMELDA
TRYSTSWEEDERSSEPIAS

This puzzle originated when I heard "Walk of Life" by Dire Straits on my drive to work one morning. Like any good constructor, I started unconsciously fiddling with the song title, and it hit me that the tune's Spoonerism would be "LOCK OF WIFE." Moments later I had what I thought was the perfect accompanying clue (Chastity belt?) — and after a few days spent developing a list of other possibilities, I was on my way.

Or so I thought. I sent the resulting 21x puzzle to Will Shortz at the NY Times and, after he gave it the thumbs down, to Rich Norris at the LA Times, where it also failed to make the cut. After subjecting their short rejection notes to a level of scrutiny normally reserved for newly-discovered biblical scrolls, I detected just an inkling of interest and decided that one or the other might consider using a revised version. But based on the feedback I'd received, I came to the conclusion — sadly — that LOCK OF WIFE had to go (apparently it would be too obscure for many solvers.) I also jettisoned DUTIFUL BAY (which didn't work, phonetically speaking, since "Beautiful Day" has a "y" sound after the "b"). In their place, I substituted DOWNED HOG as the central entry. With those modifications, along with some resulting improvements to the fill, Will liked the revision enough to accept it.

As always, I was psyched to get a Sunday puzzle in the NYT, but in this case I was also a bit wistful that my favorite entry and clue had to be sacrificed in the process. What did I learn from all this? To paraphrase another old rock n' roll tune, sometimes if you love a theme entry, set it free.

Mon 1/20/2014
HDTVTUDORPUPS
AROOIRANIAPIA
LINCOLNMEMORIAL
SPEARPAIRINGS
BEDELETTEA
JETCIVILRIGHTS
AMAKEENZOE
MIKAMLKJRDAWN
ETDEPOSIII
IHAVEADREAMRNA
NESUSEGRAB
ATTACKADREMIX
WEAREFREEATLAST
ARNEOMANIOMAR
YODARENDSWAWA
Tue 1/21/2014
WORDWOODWOOT
CIDERABLEEBRO
OLDIETEEMMEMO
REENACTSIMARET
DERIDEEASED
NEDSBENEATH
CABDAVISSICKO
OWENRESETTITO
REVELLENINDST
KEYWESTTEES
STEEPRUPIAH
CARWAXLISTENTO
OGEEUPASRETRO
ORNEALTAADRIP
KOOKLOOKLOOP

Pardon my crucinerdism, but I'm totally psyched to have my 10th NYT crossword, which means I get to be on those awesome XWordInfo lists with the cool constructors. WE MADE IT! Squee!!! (uh, I mean WOOT!!!)

Oh, right, the puzzle... I submitted it in April of 2011. Will accepted the puzzle in September, but didn't publish it until now because, well, I'll let Will tell you. (I believe the reason for the long delay is he has a lot of word ladder puzzles waiting to be published, and he wants to space them out. Makes me curious what all those other puzzles are like.) Note: I created this WORD LOOP puzzle well before Ms. Gorski's EDGINESS puzzle was published, so I couldn't LISTEN TO her (and Jeff's) advice. I don't remember pulling my hair out, but I did need to use A TRIP and ADRIP as crossing entries. Sorry about that.

Did you notice that O is the only vowel along the perimeter, and that there are no O's in the rest of the grid? Indeed, if you connect the O's, so to speak, you'll get a shape that looks a lot like an O. And since O is the only vowel in my name, it seems fitting that I would be this puzzle's constructor.

Wed 1/22/2014
LOBSHISTTHESW
ACREINTOABATE
STANGUAMLETUS
HANSCHRISTIAN
ANDERSENRAMONA
TESLABUSFIX
EVICTEDCAKE
HANSELANDGRETEL
ONESLESSEES
SKATENLAMER
THROWSPANORAMA
BROTHERSGRIMM
ABEARATTYITIS
TIETONEONTATE
HBREWKROCZITS

I've always been very much in awe of past puzzles that contained "maps," and was very interested in the idea of re-telling a story within a puzzle. I hit upon the idea of a trail of BREAD CRUMBS through the grid, and then was delighted to discover that the title HANSEL AND GRETEL was 15 letters long. It was not long before it became apparent what the other theme entries should be. The trouble then became finding a layout and fill that would work well. I went through several drafts before hitting on a solution for the NE corner which allowed me to include the rebus square while still maintaining a recognizable "S" shape with the circled letters. The resulting orientation of black squares I thought was very clean and handsome, and very fillable for the most part.

I will mention for educational purposes that Mr. Shortz was not thrilled with the presence of the central ugly "TNS," but said he could live with it considering the constrictive nature of the placement and amount of theme squares, and the fact that there was no easy way to get rid of it. Hopefully the execution of the theme makes up for this in solvers' minds.

I'm really excited to see this in print, and I hope everyone has fun cracking it!

Thu 1/23/2014
FIGJONASSUME
INOAVECSLURRY
EVAMIMITENSER
NEWKIDONTHEBADE
DRAINDUETS
STYXSHEBOOZE
WHEREBUXOM
BUTCHERBPARTIES
ATSEAAQABA
AZULLUNEDREW
LANDOSUEDE
ICEBBUSTERMOVIE
DONALDELOIEBB
APOGEESEARALI
SEWERSARKLET

The "Wordplay" documentary launched my interest in crosswords, but I never advanced past the "failed attempts on graph paper" stage until longtime friend John "DOUBLESAWBUCK" Guzzetta confided that he was getting published. Not content to let him hold that accomplishment over me, I vowed that day to get serious about crossword construction.

The Missing BLOCKs puzzle was the fourth puzzle I submitted, following three rejections. I was drawn to rebus puzzles, perhaps the result of many sick days spent watching Alex Trebek on "Classic Concentration" as a child. The use of a BLOCK rebus appealed to me since it existed as an element of the puzzle already. I compiled a list of all the BLOCK-related words and phrases and then hit the OneLook and XWordInfo databases to fill in the ones I missed. The perusal of XWordInfo revealed that the idea had been used before, first in 1999 and then more recently in 2010.

I pushed forward with the puzzle anyway, confident that my take on the idea would be unique enough to set it apart. The Thursday, October 21, 2010 grid had a 2x2 block of black squares which represented BLOCK in all the phrases that butted against it. In the Thursday, January 7, 1999 puzzle, the rebus BLOCKs behaved as cheater squares since they were placed against existing blocks and in corners. In my version, I wanted the BLOCKs to interact with the original grid construction, omitting numbering where there was not yet a BLOCK, hopefully to the befuddlement of the solver.

The close quarters of theme answers in the NE and SW constrained the quality of fill more than I would have liked, but there's nothing too egregious. Many of my original clues stayed in, but some were made easier (specifying "Star Wars" for LANDO, e.g.) or harder ("Mendes or Gabor" changing to "Deliver Us From EVA", a LL Cool J movie I barely recall). I was pleased to see that Will kept my "It might be under a tank" clue for BRA and "Mad Men" clue for UTZ, and not at all surprised that the "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle" clue for OOZE got the ax. The best edit was "Settings for some escape scenes" to replace the dull clue I had for SEWERS.

It's been a pleasure! See everyone back here in the not too distant future, some Monday, A.D.!

Fri 1/24/2014
ARCTICWHOSTHAT
WAHINEHOWAREYA
STANCEAMENAMEN
PLEARTESDARK
AOKSMOTEHENS
MILEHIGHCLUB
ISISSUESTOPIT
CONCISEYESORNO
ONEARMSUVKOOK
PEERPRESSURE
TRESAETNADDS
HEIRAWESLIME
ESPOUSEDSITARS
PLEASEGOAVERTS
SANDBAGSCANYON

Prediction: In a couple hundred years, YA will replace YOU in the English language. And YOU will seem as archaic as THOU does today. Might as well get ahead of the curve on that one.

Oh, MILE HIGH CLUB was my seed entry, obviously. But there's a special place in hell for 12-letter seed words. Never again, I tell ya.

Sat 1/25/2014
ZOMBIESWAMPED
ANOMALYSOSUEME
GETINTOWRITEIN
ATOSODADAINTY
TORANEWTONS
ROCCOLOAFMSGS
AMYTANLPGAULU
TACITUSSOBERUP
ENLSMOGDELETE
DYESBOOBSHEER
TESTBANINNS
UNLOCKSNEEOFT
RAINOUTDRLAURA
NUTELLASTINGER
STERILESASHES

This was my first attempt at themeless construction. It has some definite creakiness I'm not thrilled with, looking at it with today's eyes, but I still think it has some nice stuff in the longer spots. ZAGAT RATED / ZOMBIE, GLUTEN-FREE, and NUTELLA were the main seed entries, and many of the other long entries are strong (SURE ENOUGH, SWAMPED, ONE TOO MANY, SOBER UP, TACITUS, NUMBSKULL, STONER, WORD OF GOD). I particularly like GLUTEN-FREE, which is modern, fresh fill that isn't a proper noun (and therefore (hopefully) more familiar to more people). Enjoy!

POW Sun 1/26/2014 IT'S ALL RELATIVE
SLAPONSTREETELNORTE
CASINOSHERPALOUSIER
RIPSAWWEASELSCATTER
ICENAYGREEKSKNEADS
BALDYOKUMTEXACO
ELLEJUANNEOGENEESE
GLOBSRUDYARDAXED
AMBROSEFORGOSKETCHY
TREELETEASEUPENTERS
NEWELCREMELIBYANS
ODIHALSLANASAD
THEMAGIBATESSLIGO
OCCUPYSNOOZEESTEVEZ
BEHEADSGRIERCHINESE
IREDEASTENDBOERS
TADWARTHOGARALETNA
NADINEENACTSHOT
ABSORBSHIELDHEMEMO
STANDONEDWOODRETTON
KENNEDYALEGUPENCORE
ANTONYMTENETSDUMPED

This puzzle's theme involves implied words — that is, words that don't actually appear in the grid. I think themes like these are interesting because they make the solver take that one extra step in obtaining his or her "aha" moment. My favorite theme answer pair is probably the very G-rated NO WAY JOSE matched up with the darker (OVER) MY DEAD BODY. Coincidentally, I can assure you, BEHEADS crosses the latter entry!

Some of my favorite, more rosy non-theme clues and answers are: ELLE at 38-Across, which is the lovely name of my lovely lady; MR ED at 50-Down, who is probably one of my favorite talking horses; LIBYANS at 62-Across, which for me conjures up images of a crazy-eyed Christopher Lloyd; "One who might yell 'Go home!'" cluing BASE COACH at 63-Down; "Block party?" cluing WARDEN at 92-Down; and finally, what I hope everyone isn't yelling by the time they get all the way down to 96-Down, NO MORE!

POW Mon 1/27/2014
STABUHOHMACHO
TRUESOLOALLEN
AIRTRAVELGEESE
LEASEIDUNNO
LDSPEACEKEEPER
PENNMETAMA
LIFELINEOATEN
IRISDOLCEBRED
KABOBFACECARD
ENOLOSROWS
DINNERTABLESHE
AENEIDRAPID
NICADTIMESHARE
CACTICELLADEN
ONIONHUBSBEDS

A few years ago I was watching TV and a commercial for timeshares came on. In this commercial the word TIMESHARE is shouted an absurd number of times, as if its writers missed the day in grammar school when pronouns were introduced. And that was it. I wish I could say that today's puzzle has a more interesting, Eureka-esque story behind its inception, but alas, it doesn't. I'm hopeful that, in time, the puzzle will come to accept and embrace its humble beginnings.

So, my first thought after turning off the TV was to have TIME wedged in between its two associated two words, generating wacky phrases. As in AIRTIME + TIMETRAVEL = AIRTIMETRAVEL, e.g. Seemed like a good idea, but the concept never took flight, and I ended up depositing a half-filled grid with the rest of my misfit puzzles.

Months later, bored and looking through my files, guess which half-filled grid caught my eye? I realized (Eureka!) that the TIMESHARE thing could be done in the same way as all of those other two-words-that-have-one-word-in-common themes, but with a little twist. And there you have it.

Nothing stands out in my memory with respect to the actual construction. As a high school math teacher and number enthusiast, I was excited to be able to get FIBONACCI in the puzzle. Also, "Music for Airports" is almost always on in the background when I'm constructing, and so ENO, despite being crosswordese-ish, always elicits a smile.

Hope you enjoyed it.

Tue 1/28/2014
STEMILKSSITUP
PAPANOAHCOWLS
ACIDFORARUINS
SOCCERMAMBOSAT
AVASTALOT
SAPPERSPLITUP
NTHREACHSNARE
AEONDROOPKEGS
FINEDCLEARBET
UNEARTHRIGORS
BRANDIANA
PSISTRUCKDUMBO
ALLOTOBOECOAT
RABBILANEHART
STOICLISTONTO

I'm thrilled to be a newly published NY Times crossword author, after several appearances in GAMES Magazine and the LA Times. My very first puzzle, however, was a self-published one. In 2000, I doctored an issue of GAMES Magazine to include a puzzle that featured a marriage proposal to the woman I was dating. We would usually spend our lunch hour together working on the daily crossword, so it seemed an appropriate way to pop the question. I hadn't heard of Crossword Compiler at the time and did it all the old-fashioned way, laboriously developing the fill, the clues, and the layout over a three week period. Even at the new and improved NY Times pay rate, my effort probably would have only worked out to about five cents an hour, but the eventual payoff was more than worth it. We've now been married for over a decade.

The first theme answer I developed for this puzzle is still my favorite: PHONE BILBO. ("Give a hobbit a ring?") There had been a lot of buzz in Hollywood about the filming of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, so I had Bilbo on the brain and set about looking for other -BO theme answers. The puzzle was accepted in June of 2012, six months before the premiere, so I wondered if its publication might coincide with the opening. Not the case, as it turned out. But thankfully, Mr. Jackson does love his trilogies, so it coincided with The Desolation of Smaug instead, making for a very memorable first publication for me. Thanks to Mr. Baggins for the idea, Mr. Shortz for the thumbs up, and Mrs. Katy Stillman for saying "Yes" thirteen years ago!

Wed 1/29/2014
SALAFEDUPJPEG
EMITILOSEOAST
ROBEVITAEHYPO
ULYSSESSGRANT
MEATYESQONE
SNEAKUNPIN
PRSELGINBAYLOR
HOHOSINAICABO
ADAMSANDLERYEN
SIDEASALAD
ENOBITVEILS
WOODROWWILSON
DEBIEATERMOPE
ENOLACTIIALEE
WAXYSKORTRAZR

Though it took me three tries to get this puzzle accepted, I was glad with the final result. Looking back on the first two submissions, I have a "What was I thinking?" mentality; so although it meant more effort on my end, I'm glad Will did not accept either of the first two. I mean I actually had "THE NAME GAME" (the Shirley Ellis hit song) as the revealer in my first submission — weak, weak, WEAK! That entry helped with symmetry at the time, but that's a perfect example of rushing, being overexcited and submitting a puzzle that isn't all it can be.

In my second submission, I got rid of the reaveler. With this entry gone, I had to come up with new people to reconstruct the symmetry. Like my first submission, I wanted to try and use four people from four different categories (e.g. music, acting, politics, sports). I was able to do that, but with an obscure entry or two that Will wasn't buying. It was then that I realized how limited my palette was with this theme.

I had to sacrifice the idea of getting people from four different categories and double up on one — and then Woodrow Wilson came to mind, who I think has the coolest name for this theme, with WWI right in the middle. It meant having two presidents in the puzzle, but when it came right down to it, I figured, "So what? It turned out just fine."

The one thing I really like about this puzzle, which I've done in a Times crossword before, is taking words in their natural state and creating wordplay out of them. I didn't have to do anything to the words themselves; I was simply able to allow everyone to see these words in a different light.

My favorite clue in the puzzle is 5-down: Word after "take" or "give me". That is Will's handy work. My favorite answer, far and away, is SABO, as in Chris Sabo the baseball player. I always try and include one in my crosswords — the names usually get re-clued as non-baseball players, but there's no alternative for this one since he's the only well-known person with this last name. It's also my second pangram of my four accepted NYT puzzles (which I forgot until I looked at it recently), and it's the only puzzle thus far in which Will has not modified a single letter.

Thanks and hope you all like it!

Thu 1/30/2014
PISMOBURYERGO
AMPEDAREAPEEK
WHATSBLACKWHITE
NOMEELLAEENSY
OSAYLOAM
ANDREDALLOVER
LEETYROHERETO
AMAJDUDACID
NOLOSSSOARADO
THISNEWSPAPER
ADIAAKIN
VERNERAGEKIEV
ASUNBURNEDPANDA
MANENOIRARDEN
PUTSOWLSWAYNE

I remember when I saw "Wordplay" how blown away I was by the genius of the famous BOB DOLE/CLINTON ELECTED crossword featured in the movie. When I started making puzzles myself a couple of years later, I thought it would be fun to try to construct one in the same vein. While this crossword is obviously nowhere near as intricate or brilliant as its progenitor, I'm glad to be able to add to the short list of "Schrodinger" puzzles that feature squares with more than one correct answer.

One other note: when I read on Xwordinfo a few months ago about a constructor who submitted a revision of a puzzle that had already been accepted, it prompted me to revisit this puzzle, which was one of my earlier efforts. What I saw — several entries that I no longer liked — convinced me to revamp it and send the update to Will, who graciously allowed me to substitute the new for the old. I hope solvers enjoy the final version.

Fri 1/31/2014
LETSDOTHISTHING
ANIMATIONSTUDIO
HADALONGWAYTOGO
AMICISTALUNGS
BEEKBEINGSOLE
ALSVALETEDTED
NEUTERDOTES
ADPAGESFELTTIP
XAXISVOYAGE
AMASAMISENCOT
RANDMULANNOTE
ARAILLEUGABOR
BANDEDANTEATERS
ICANNOTTELLALIE
CASTONESSPELLON

Obviously, LETS DO THIS THING was the seed for this themeless puzzle. For the best impact I felt it had to reside in the 1-Across position and, of course, if 1-Across is fifteen letters in length, a triple stack is required at the top and bottom (in a symmetrical grid).

Finding the appropriate block formation to allow those stacks and an interesting fill was the trick. I prefer grids that have eye-appeal, and this block arrangement provided that for me. It also allowed quite a bit of flexibility in the filling process.

I'm always intrigued by Will's changes to my clues and I continue to try to up my game in the cluing department. This is one of my better efforts with about 2/3 of my clues remaining unchanged. My favorite clue from Will is "Practice test?" for BAR EXAM, and of my own I particularly like "Marker's mark maker" for FELT TIP.

I hope all found the filling-in to be fun-filled and fulfilling.

XWord Info Home
XWord Info © 2007-2024, Jim Horne
92 ms