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

Thumbnails

Puzzles for September, 2018
with Constructor comments

View these same grids with comments from:
Constructor (24)Jeff Chen (30)Jim Horne (12)Hide comments
Sat 9/1/2018
SAMBASGAMBIA
TRIEDONCUISINE
ITSAZOOOLDSTER
MIDSENTENCEPRO
SCOTSHATHFATS
OLESMISOSERIO
NESCENTRIPETAL
BUDGETCUT
CONANOBRIENHAN
APERYUNOSPELE
NEERWRENPRADA
INDTIGRISRIVER
TENMILESLOVENE
BROILERTALENTS
ESTATEGETSET

This one started with IT'S A ZOO crossing NOTHING BURGER, two entries I heard on the same day I started this puzzle. The former was a response to the NYC subways on a particularly bad day and the latter was uttered on cable news at least five times that day, probably by defense lawyers for you know who.

I liked CONTORTIONIST because I had the clue (one who is bent out of shape) in mind for a while. I also really like the clue for CENTRIPETAL (a force of nature). It seems that many themeless puzzles these days don't favor long words instead of phrases or idioms; some think they're not as interesting. I think it's all about the clues — if they're clever, then the solver will enjoy the entry.

MIDSENTENCE occurred to me because I have the bad habit of interrupting others that way. My daughter has recently made a point of that to me. I was surprised to learn that this is the first time that word was in a Times crossword.

I'm pleased that this puzzle is mostly junk-free in a pretty diagram. After all the puzzles I've constructed over the years, I still get a kick out of a good-looking grid with a low word count. The aesthetics of an attractive array of black and white squares is not appreciated by all solvers, but it's a big part of why I like to solve and create themeless puzzles so much.

Sun 9/2/2018 GOING HEAD TO HEAD
STANDPAWNSBEDNERF
ARMORUHHUHECOSOLAR
SUESEHTMINOTAURTWICE
SENTITEMOIRAMBOWSER
TROTSSTOODSPHERE
LOIREWINNOWISE
NOTLIMAHBURRRODRBI
SCHSLIMBOEDRELEASE
AAACELTIDRISOWNER
LTCOLEKULDARTHVADER
ORKSUNENOYES
YPOONSREDBARONPRINT
DRAKEHAZELLAOSOAR
SATIATEUNIDEALOCTA
THEYAKDIVADGOLIATH
CAPSIDDRYHOLLY
ASSUMELAMBSSMALL
NAMTABJOKERATTAALGA
GLITZETOXIUQWINDMILL
ESTEEDOTBRUINUPSET
LAHRINAELATEOSTEO

Since starting grad school a year ago, I haven't had too much time to construct crosswords, but I was happy to find some time during a break a few months ago. This puzzle was inspired by the phrase "going head to head." It's only now occurring to me that, in addition to going head to head, enemies are also said to cross each other...there's probably another theme in there.

For some odd reason, my favorite part of this grid is the 2x2 box of L's in 99- and 106-Across.

With this puzzle, I've now managed to fit two of my sisters into crosswords (you're welcome, KUDZU). Two down, two to go!

Mon 9/3/2018
CHASESTORMAPP
AESOPIONIAWAR
SITTINGDUCKKEA
ERASENDSELWAY
SOHOASIANS
STANDINGORDER
AERIESRICODAB
AARPAOLTAME
BROAURASPIGOT
WALKINGPAPERS
INHALEEARS
GEESESONIAPAW
LEARUNNINGJOKE
ODDGRACEOLLIE
OSSYIPESNOEND

I'm thrilled to have my first puzzle published in the New York Times. One thing I have discovered while learning this craft is that the community of crossword constructors is welcoming and generous. I'd like to specifically thank Jeff Chen, Sam Ezersky, Sam Donaldson, Will Nediger, Sam Trabucco, Finn Vigeland, and Peter Broda. These talented constructors selflessly shared the benefit of their experience with a newbie, and I cannot overstate how grateful I am for that.

I'm a clinical psychologist practicing in Catonsville, MD, and I am fortunate to have found a calling that suits me and gives me the great privilege of helping others as they grow and overcome obstacles in their lives. I live in Catonsville with my wife Beth and four of our five children, all of whom were in middle school and at that AWKWARDAGE when this puzzle was constructed. My oldest is a college graduate and working in his first professional job in environmental science. In my free time, I play piano and trumpet in a local band, and Saturdays this fall I can be found cheering on my alma mater, the TCU Horned Frogs. Whether this will prove therapeutic remains to be seen as of this writing.

Crossword constructing has proven therapeutic for me, and I hope you enjoy the result of my first effort. With the benefit of more experience I look back on this puzzle and wish I had another crack at a few of the fill choices, but I'm happy with the theme, and I learned a lot from reviewing the changes Will and his team made to many of the clues.

I have more accepted puzzles in the queue, and I look forward to sharing them with you. I only began solving crosswords a couple of years ago, and I quickly discovered solving is a wonderful way to clear my mind of all the tasks and worries which might otherwise take me out of the present moment. I hope this puzzle gives you a few minutes of that same peace.

Tue 9/4/2018
IMOFFSPURNPUG
SOLARTAGUPIPO
ALLTOGETHERAFT
YEASTATSNOB
ATOMICTHEORY
ALWAYSREACT
MOORASIAMUMA
AIRPORTTERMINAL
SNLSEEPSNEIL
DALAIFAIRLY
ANCHORTENANT
COLABONDMVP
USATHEEIGHTIES
TISSEARSOATES
ERSKNUTEWREST

This puzzle was accepted two years ago, but I remember working for quite a while with just EIGHTIES as a revealer and then being really happy to expand it to THE EIGHTIES.

It's interesting to think about what "the" phrases are crossworthy — for instance Jeff Chen's word list includes THE FBI, THE DEA, THE GOP, THE FAA, THE CIA, THE BBC, THE NBA, THE NFL, THE NHL, and THE USA. If you put "the abc" or "the xyz" into Google they get a lot of hits, but those are clearly not crossworthy — hard to know where to draw the line, but THE EIGHTIES is definitely a thing in my book.

I like this puzzle, but if I had it to do over again I would try to work ANKLE TATTOO and ALRIGHTY THEN in there, and I would get rid of OLLA in the northwest.

Wed 9/5/2018
JUTSDANETITANS
ASHESTANOCELOT
CHEERLEADTENETS
OEDOMANTAUT
BRONCOSDOLPHINS
EGODEMONSIVAN
DAFOEORAKNEEL
TEAMBUILDING
SPEWSENTANION
ODIEGETOUTNTH
PATRIOTSBENGALS
TWOSRULEPGA
BATHOSLUNISOLAR
URBANEATTNRAMI
GIANTSSHUEONES

TEAMBUILDING as a revealer came about as we brainstormed for a different puzzle. The last Super Bowl must have been on Amanda's mind because PAT-RIOTS jumped out immediately as a funny way to say PATRIOTS. Turns out a lot of team names can be broken down into other words! We went about making a list and, with the theme set selected, moved onto the grid.

Erik has an amazing knack of connecting theme entries (4 in this case) and he built the majority of the grid. We had originally clued the theme entries to both be people (in some way or another) to stick with the TEAMBUILDING concept, but this works too!

Thu 9/6/2018
OSLOMIATAEMUS
SLAVECRUSNANA
SAVERHETTUZIS
OMARGOSEENETS
CHERERIC
JOSHESNOIDEA
ORCASSSNNAILS
CZARATEOFTEMP
KONGPRATEIDOS
ESPERANTO
SALSATAGANISE
ALAWICCANSMOD
TIPOFTHEICEBERG
ABILITYNARRATE
NINETYASANAS

Sometimes you look at a phrase and a fully-formed crossword idea jumps out at you.

This wasn't one of those times.

Roughly eleventy-six iterations later ...

Fri 9/7/2018
DISCSAGASAPPS
ONTHECLOCKDRIP
PAPAYATREEVOLE
PHASEROTTIPSE
LOUTSQUICKSAND
ELLELUNCHMONEY
RESSAIDBARER
BOUTDORY
SHAUNROOTTOW
SPELLCHECKWERE
HEADSHOPSJANET
EARPPBRRUSTIC
ARIAABOMINABLE
VENTDIVINGBELL
EDGESTEAKIDYL
Sat 9/8/2018
MAJORCSPOTCRO
ARUBAUNITYOED
RESINTAXISQUAD
KATETIPSOURCE
ERABATCHNESTS
TUSCANHASBEST
GEORGIADOME
CARROTJUICE
SEATFILLERS
DAFTMARFERRIS
UNLITSINUSONE
BIONICEELBRAN
OMAGAZINELILTS
SATRANDDADORE
ELSARTSYVEGAS

This puzzle started with 7-Down and 37-Across, and I like how the rest of the central stagger came together. I remember that episode of "Seinfeld" where Kramer is a SEAT FILLER at the Tonys; the typical shenanigans ensue.

I decided against the pangram twice while writing this grid. Just needing a W to complete the pangram, I didn't think WAV at 56-Down was worth it. And so, resignedly, I changed my original 22-D PANGRAM to TANGRAM.

POW Sun 9/9/2018 MIXED FEELINGS
BUMTATALILACASSAY
BRAHOLEDARENAPEELE
SNOWUNDERTOTALRECALL
SLNIAOMENLIARDEL
ADULTRIOOPTSEGO
POISEBATTINGGLSAVOW
PETERPANODORSWHIRS
IGORBRITAIFONLY
ASSAMTEAORBSIR
BLUNTVETTESANDTRAP
LOVEHATERELATIONSHIPS
YESWECANMILANTESSA
RECMPGCONDOFEE
BOLEROETHOSESTA
PAVERSTETSROLLRIRA
AREAAMPERSANDSFSTOP
YERCIAOGOAFISTS
OFTARLOCEESFREDO
FOURLEAFCLRINDECENCY
FORUMLEIASLINDTMOE
STEMSADOUTYAYSEON

I'm pleased to publish my first NYT Sunday — thanks to Sam and Will for their nice edit, especially their clues for 37- and 54-Across, and 59-Down.

This puzzle is special to me for two reasons. Firstly, by sheer coincidence, it appears on the final day of the U.S. Open tennis tournament. With respect and affection for the golf competition held in the UK each July, in New York, The Open only means one thing.

I started out going with my mom when Sampras and Agassi were in their pomp, although I idolized Patrick Rafter, the Australian who relentlessly attacked the net and said "sorry, mate" when he had to catch his serve toss. I have had some of the best sports moments of my life at the Open, including a memorable night match in 2000 when my mom and I saw my hero Rafter (by then a two-time Open champion) lose dramatically in the first round. Though it wasn't the result I wanted, the atmosphere was electric, and I was hooked.

In recent years, I have been making the annual pilgrimage to Flushing with my soon-to-be-wife Laura — my solving partner on Sundays and my everything partner every day. She has been encouraging me in my constructing since we first met, and I am always bouncing ideas off her. I thought "love-hate relationships" could make for an interesting Sunday concept and revealer, and first tried a "switch" idea (answers like love speech and hate handles), as well as conventionally hiding "love" and "hate" inside longer answers. But I was struggling with the execution until Laura suggested a rebus element which could operate differently in the across and down directions.

After a lot of trial and error, I found the "H-A-T-E" strings hiding in those two longer answers, and realized I could intersect them both with the centrally placed revealer (It seemed logical for the "L-O-V-E" strings all to operate horizontally because Across clues appear first in print). This led to a somewhat unusual grid with lots of options for long non-theme material, and I'm happy with the bonuses I was able to include. It's a real challenge to stay at or under the 140-word limit, so I hope the tradeoffs, including more short plurals than I'd prefer, were worth it, and that solvers enjoy my interpretation of mixed feelings.

Mon 9/10/2018
IDTAGABSRASTA
FORCEMEWEATON
FREETRADEFRONT
YAKBOSSESPOSH
BUDSTHEDIE
CHEESEDEADCALM
COMFYTONGUES
SOBENAMESLIFE
ALROKERSEDAN
BURLIVESSPREAD
INKGASPLAY
AWEDSAVIORLEO
NODUHBILGEPUMP
CRONEONEMERIT
ANNEXWEDEWERS

Today's grid underwent one small change between submission and publication: 35-Across was originally REBA, clued as "Sitcom that starred a country singer." (I'll have to assume that there's an unwritten one-country-singer-turned-actor-per-puzzle limit.) Favorite clue: 10-Down.

Tue 9/11/2018
METADATADEFANG
OXYMORONILLSEE
SHRINKINGVIOLET
HOEDARESO
ERSENGLISHROSE
STELLARPTAOLD
ALIASSNUG
FLOWERYLANGUAGE
LOPSOCEAN
AKAATMTARGETS
GILDTHELILYLEA
OBESEGNAT
ASFRESHASADAISY
WOEISIDOGOWNER
ELECTSSTEWPOTS
Wed 9/12/2018
ASHEPAPABEGAT
SHUNEYESOFBLUE
WINDPETITFOURS
INGOTEMTNEAT
TZEADDOEDSLY
HORSDOEUVRES
AFTLASMUIR
BOUILLABAISSE
ERRSGUVHOC
MILLEFEUILLE
TLCSAOFOGAAA
AEROTWOGETIT
FRENCHCHEFDIME
TOWERSUITEDOER
SISSYTOADANDY

It's always nice to see one's work published in the New York Times, but I was especially gratified to see this one appear — it had been accepted on January 21, 2017! Well, as they say, good things come to those who wait. For those of you who found 2-Down to be difficult, please note that the event mentioned in the clue was less than a month in the past when the puzzle was accepted.

The puzzle theme is similar to one I published in the Chronicle of Higher Education several years ago entitled "Made in Japan". I noticed that several Japanese words commonly known to English speakers have literal translations that are rather surprising or intriguing. For example, "sayonara" means "if it must be so" and "karaoke" means "empty orchestra". More recently, I noticed the same thing sometimes occurs in the names of French food items, and the presence of the inimitable Julia Child on American television offered a revealer that would lead to such theme entries. In devising the grid, I was fortunate in the letter length of the selected entries; they allowed me to use a progression of terms that become, to a degree, relatively harder to spell or less familiar as one proceeds down the grid.

And a pun hangs in the air that I can't resist — the French terms are all theme entries, but not all entrées. Despite that comment, I hope you enjoy the puzzle.

Thu 9/13/2018
QUIZAMAZECCS
ETREKEFIRHUT
DEKEDCARPIGABO
SOYNOSURSI
ASKJOESLLCS
THEFOUNTAIOFYOH
MIMEABORTS
VOYAGEGETUPS
HARMONSUNS
FROTHIGATTHEMOH
LENOISLEPSY
AHEMTETYET
RAIBOWTROSHELL
ESCLITERIBOX
SHHEXUDEOBOX

I suspect Will and crew have a backlog of rebus puzzles in their Thursday inventory. This one took nearly as long to go from acceptance to publication (17 months) as my first 5 Thursday puzzles combined (3+1.5+3+5+5 = 17.5 months).

Since I created this puzzle so long ago, I see it now through a very different set of eyes. When I wrote it, I was really into creating pangrammatic grids (i.e., using all the letters of the alphabet at least once). While scrabbly letters can be great since they're generally rarer in crosswords, if I were making this puzzle today, I would prioritize smoother fill over including the last few letters of the alphabet. For example, QED, UTE, and ETRE seem like a high price to pay for the Q in the upper-left corner.

On the other hand, I still agree with my decision to deploy the Utah block (i.e., the Utah-shaped clump of 5 contiguous black squares) in the lower right. Once THIN OUT, INBOX, and OUTBOX were in place, if I hadn't deployed the Utah block (i.e., if I had put a black square where the S in SHELL is and removed the 3 black squares to the left), then there would have been only one entry into that corner (THIN OUT). To create good grid flow, you want at least two words to connect any isolated section with the rest of the grid.

Two other things I like about this puzzle: (1) the symmetry between CARPING ABOUT and RAINBOW TROUT; and (2) the image of a stacked INBOX/OUTBOX sitting on someone's desk. My original cluing for the INBOX/OUTBOX revealer was to treat them as a unit (thereby emphasizing the visual nature of the stacking), but hopefully, solvers will still get the picture (hah!) in the puzzle's current incarnation.

Fri 9/14/2018
WAVELENGTHSARP
IMAGINETHATBOA
DANGERMOUSEOTS
ESSWOESBEAVIS
FILATERSEST
SHTETLSHEEPISH
WORTHFOUNDTEE
INITBEADSBARB
SEPLAMPSDELIA
SYLLABUSKELLER
CHEATERBOIL
HOTTERSEERDAX
ANIHUNTANDPECK
REMITSAMIRACLE
DYETHATSGENIUS

I mailed this puzzle late 2016, back when I was using this type of grid layout for themeless submissions. It's a good way to get nice 3x10 and 3x11 spaces, but these days I start elsewhere, especially to avoid the triple stack of three-letter answers.

THAT'S GENIUS was the only seed. I tried it in every 11-letter slot until it finally seemed at home all the way at the bottom. Hope you enjoy!

Sat 9/15/2018
CAMPUSMAPPASTA
OHIOSTATEAXIOM
SAMESEXMARRIAGE
ABETAERAINMAN
ORELSEGAG
ROGUESYEOHCEO
APRILJERUSALEM
STANSPLITGERE
PIPSQUEAKAGAIN
SCHRIGSOVINES
OCTHIREES
IMAFOOLNANLGA
SELFDRIVINGCARS
MOVIEFINGERTIP
SWATSTAKESTEPS

This puzzle is one of the success stories of the editing process, so I owe extra thanks to Will for this one, for having both high standards and patience with constructors.

Back in 2015, I'd built a puzzle around the same pair of 15-letter seeds (which may speak a little to their pairing: I was starting to write this puzzle just as Obergefell v. Hodges was being decided — plus I'm a computer science faculty member, so I was particularly drawn to the second of the two long entries). I had managed to include a bunch of other longer entries that I liked a lot (SPARKPLUG, HARPER LEE, ITS SO EASY, ...), but, as the rejection note from Will and Joel said, there were too many ugly short entries that "start to add up after a while to make for unpleasant solving." That's always a tendency that I have to fight when I'm filling puzzles: I tend to overvalue what I consider to be awesome long entries and fail to pay enough attention to the costly short junk that they induce.

I got similar feedback from some other editors at other venues, and so, begrudgingly, I put the puzzle away in my (overstuffed) filing drawer of rejections.

But I kept finding myself compelled by this pair of 15s, and so I pulled it back out a couple of years later. In short, I moved a couple of black squares around, refilled again from scratch, reclued it all, and submitted a new version. A good portion of the NW corner (my favorite portion of the 2015 version) stayed intact from attempt #1 to attempt #2, and OVINES survived (but migrated in the grid); save those pieces and the 15s, everything else was brand new.

And here's the result. Hope you enjoy it — and, even if you don't, I hope you appreciate that the version you didn't see was a lot worse!

POW Sun 9/16/2018 "UH, WHAT?"
CLUMSYRACYABBACAPS
HAVANAOBOEBEEROHIO
OREGONTRANSPLANTMITT
OKAYOKAYAMOUNTFETCH
APEXAGASSINATURE
MURSETURNTHECORONER
MAPSLIRABUSSAWE
AREDRAMASTMARTIN
KINGJAMESBUYABLEARES
ENDASHESEMPTYPARENT
WAIVEJAMIECRAVE
ARNETTSETONASPHODEL
RAGURIOTINGONTHEWALL
PHABLETSSNOODBOA
SAMONEASCOWALPS
PROJECTRUNAWAYSPREE
IMHEREPREFEREMIR
TSARSCABALAINUNISON
TOWSSENATOROFGRAVITY
LUKEKEENATMSFTERIE
ETSYISLETOGOSADIST

Excited to be back in the Magazine pages! Given how many tiny crosswords I make these days, setting my mind to a Sunday puzzle was refreshing.

Because this is a fairly established theme type — add-a-sound themes have been pretty much done to death — I knew I needed to make the puzzle stand out for solvers in some way. Themewise, that meant making every example as amusing as possible. Crossword jokes are never going to be high comedy, but they should still make the solver smile when they uncover each example. A lot of that comes in carefully planning the theme set before you start building the grid, making sure you have a good joke to go with each answer. It also means theme answers that are just plausible enough to be real, while still silly or incongruous enough to elicit a laugh — of course you'd never really call a fat Congressperson "Senator of Gravity," but it's funny to think about.

The other way I tried to make the puzzle stand out was with the fill. I used only six theme answers instead of trying to jam in seven or eight, which allowed me to increase the length of each answer and make the word count lower. Sunday puzzles at the max word count limit of 140 can often feel like a chore to finish, particularly if the fill is stale and familiar. For this one, I tried to make the puzzle free of the normal three and four letter crutch words and use longer, more fresh and interesting vocabulary. In the past, this might have meant using seeded entries of pop culture names or modern slang, but I'm increasingly focusing instead on filling with regular words (CLUMSY, BEER, TYPING, etc.) that can become fun entries when clued in an imaginative way. I think that makes for a more enjoyable experience for every type of solver.

Hope people enjoy it!

Mon 9/17/2018
SPEWPITSBOSSY
LAVAOPENIRATE
ACIDTREEFAULT
TELEPHONEPOLE
DOOMZACRAT
NEGSLIDETACKLE
EXAMESOLORAX
ACNESENDSEAST
REDDIOILDUKE
BLOOPERREELTAD
YSLAGETEES
FIDGETSPINNER
CHIRPDUOSIONA
TENORENDOFROS
RHINODEANFISH

My children were certainly not immune to fidget spinner fever! It got me wondering whether anyone had squeezed the term into a puzzle yet, and luckily, no one had. After failing to come up with some sort of toy fad theme, I thought about a fishing spinner and how it'd be silly to clue a fidget spinner as a lure to catch an antsy fish. Then I was off to find three other phrases unrelated to fishing but containing a fishing term at the end that could be clued in a similarly facetious way.

Originally, I did indeed clue the theme entries that way, but thankfully Will and the crew suggested we give straightforward clues to the themers and add the fish revealer (some of the puns were pretty groan-worthy!). Of course this improved the puzzle by leaps and bounds, and I really like the outcome. I hope you do too!

Tue 9/18/2018
SHOOSOFIAJADA
KERRAWASHEXIT
IMACWITHCHEESE
METHANEHOP
SNEERSCOTSMEN
SEEBELOWOMG
EMTTATAAMOCO
CARBONDIOXIDE
MOLARIAMBLYE
ANAEASTSIDE
JORDACHEIPADS
OTCAMMONIA
JOHNHUGHESSTAT
UHUHSTARRTINA
GOGOESTOPSCAN
Wed 9/19/2018
IVSRUSEBOARD
TICCIGARICIER
TCHOTCHKEGESSO
INURESCHMALTZ
ATLTBONES
CHUTZPAHOUI
LIZASLAPTALES
AYEYIDDISHALA
PARMAATTAOVAL
IREOYGEVALT
BINDERMIL
MEGILLAHSINAI
ALIBIVERKLEMPT
DIVANERNIEPOE
DEERESOAPSSN

SCOT: My inlaws were Jewish immigrants, and my wife and I bar mitzvahed three sons, so coming up with Yiddish expressions was not a problem. My only concern was that I include only entries that were sort of mainstream. In my first submission, Will accepted the theme entries but was not satisfied with the fill. That was when I brought on Jeff Chen to partner with me, and his fill, as usual, had plenty of sparkle.

The timeline was, I think, pretty typical for the NYT; I submitted the puzzle on Sep 11, 2017; it was accepted on Dec 11, 2017, and it is published today, Sep 19—about a year from start to finish.

Thu 9/20/2018
MAMBAGLOTTIS
STAUBBOARHUNT
GODRYENSCONCE
MESSAGETRA
EMISLOBHED
TATAANAHEIMCA
CNBCSIDEROADS
ECGAEDWITH
INTERLCSAL
RATPOISONNABS
IGETIDEASSCOT
SRNAGESCUP
TIGSECTION
GOTORUINAMUCK
INONEACTLINEA
GYMSOCKENTRY

This idea might seem original, but I know it as more of a rehash. Technically, I'd fleshed out a similar grid years ago; I was ho-hum on my execution even then, but resolved to post it to my old puzzle website regardless, and lay any lingering thoughts to rest.

Upon recently realizing I hadn't constructed a Thursday crossword since 2012, the above popped in my mind again, accompanied by that same nagging feeling. Suffice it to say, I dug it all out of my theme graveyard, and after a stretch of brainstorming: BOOM.

My favorite aspect of the final result is definitely the phantom 53-Across clue in print. Since GUAC begins at that intersecting G, there needs to be a number in the first box ... but GSECTION is really the continuation of STRING SECTION rather than its own eight-letter answer. The quirk is more unintentional than diabolical, but I hope it caused a few double takes.

Fri 9/21/2018
CHIDECRIMEBOSS
OASESDUDERANCH
STUBSSTALINERA
SEPIATEASER
EMPTYWORDSIED
TAOSACNENEEDS
SISAVOCADOS
LEAVENDREAMS
CORNMEALRID
PISANOINKNOLE
ANOTRADEMARKS
STUCCOATARI
TATAMIMATMANOR
ICEPALACEALGAE
STRESSATESEEDS
Sat 9/22/2018
APPETIZERRISK
PEASHOOTERACTI
HERCULEANEFFORT
IDSSAYSIDONAE
DEEDOCCUR
SERUMSACKDRESS
CEDARRAPIDS
CHARLIEROSE
THETIMEWARP
PRESSPASSNUMBS
ROASTPERU
ECTEMBRACEKIR
THETWILIGHTZONE
TERIAAMEETINGS
YESMTEENANGST

I made this grid a long time ago, before any of the allegations about CHARLIE ROSE had surfaced (to my knowledge), and forgot about his inclusion as they did surface. While I'd obviously not choose to include him in a puzzle I made today, I'm happy the clue here acknowledges the voices of the women who've come forward about his misconduct over his own voice. It's so important to believe the victims of abuse when they're brave enough to speak out (rather than writing them off as exploiting the #MeToo Movement), and failure to do so only encourages more abuse.

Apologies to those who seeing his name caused pain, and I hope the rest of the puzzle provided some higher points.

POW Sun 9/23/2018 THE ART OF PUZZLE-MAKING
STUDSEMIRWASPSPORE
ERNIEVIVAALTACOLIN
LOSANGELESSURREALIST
FUELTANKSMARSROVER
IPASIUDMGMTOTSERA
EELPUPUAREUTESTSP
TASDORITOSSYD
MEDAYNIPATREATA
AROMASYONPOENIMROD
CAGEFREEAAHLABNOTES
TREACHERYOFIMAGES
TERSEHUMANRACEEDAMS
RTELODILINCLIE
ITASCAITSJUSTATMOST
OUTEATSTROPEQBRANCH
AREPRESENTATION
GASDRYERTURNINGS
PEDIISITNOTHOLA
ONEDOZENPEAUNPOETIC
PIPELINEOXYMAGRITTE
SETRATESDTSNEARMISS

I was Magritte's "Son of Man" for a Hallowe'en party a couple of years ago. The decision, however, had a fatal flaw: it was my Hallowe'en party and I was playing bartender. Seeing, I learned later, is a useful sense to have when preparing drinks for public consumption.

"Seeing is not believing" could be a warning drawing from the subject of this puzzle. The construction came together rather quickly, because I always needed to think several steps ahead to ensure the viability of its completion.

I'll go into some depth about the construction, for those interested. Tribute puzzles put an inherent limitation on theme entries: you've got to keep them basic and trivial (i.e. like trivia). (That being said, I have to acknowledge here Elizabeth Gorski and Kevin Der for having contributed the finest puzzles of this sort, in my book.) I thought here the added quotation simultaneously refined and complicated the tribute, and once I decided to include it, given the beautiful way it can break into segments of 7, 15, and 7, it became clear that I needed to go with right-left symmetry. (In fact, the crossings work out very kindly if you stack the lines directly on top of one another, but immediately you'll see the impossibility of this option.)

For the pipe itself, I knew it needed to possess a convincing likeness once it was drawn, and I was intent on honoring the original proportions as much as possible. So I put an image of "Treachery" into a vector graphics software, overlaid a 21x21 grid on it, and set out to find the key vertices of the pipe, seeing where they landed in the grid. These spots would correspond to the squares with circles in them. I also did some of manual testing in one of those science notebooks I somehow still own, despite completing zero scientific activities on a daily basis. It was only then I realized just how much the luscious, round edges of this pipe contribute to its sensuality, hence my "rounded edges look best" direction.

Because the text "Ceci n'est pas une pipe" is so iconic, and a fundamental visual component of the painting, as opposed to being a paratext, I knew it had to be included, in the original French. With the quotation on three lines, the title of the painting, and the other thematic material, there was no way this was going to make it in as a regular entry. Yet, at 17 letters, and hence 17 points in the outline, the phrase gives just enough resolution for the image (better than 14 for "THIS IS NOT A PIPE"). Once these proportions were determined, they were fixed, though the image could be moved vertically within the grid, and I could start the phrase at several points (I limited the possibilities to the left side: so the circles at 29-, 36-, or 62-across). Getting the title of work in the interstitial line without circles and finding out the"I" at 85-across could pull double duty was a crucial step toward getting that central section to work. I do wish MAGRITTE could have been in the very last slot, to echo the extreme corner position of the signature in the original image, but the crossings wouldn't allow it (it barely allowed the present corner to happen).

Thanks as always to Will and co. for helping get this out into the world. A couple of notes here: My original title for this puzzle was "WHAT YOU SEE IS...". The central bottom box was also revised from the submission (I had, under IS IT NOT: CEO, EXT, STE; not sure if EXT and STE are less desirable than OXY and DTS.) I had a lot more wordplay in the original clues, but maybe some were imprecise, or too oblique: SELFIE was "Single shot?" EMITTERS was "Ones with issues?" NOTE was "Staff pick?" The clues for LAB NOTES and TROUPE, however, made it through.

In the end, this puzzle is not only an homage to Magritte, but also an homage to the typology of puzzles: apart from being a tribute, it has circles you connect to make an image, a quotation, and even a bit of thematic wordplay with 120-across. It's also an homage to paper [solving].

Hopefully, the surrealism of the original painting gains a new dimension here: a representation of a representation. The (benign) joke, which was the reason "Treachery" was so enticing to invoke, is on detractors of this theme: if you finish the puzzle, play your bonus round of connect-the-dots, and declare "that's not a pipe!" or "that isn't anything like a pipe!," you'd, of course, be fully correct.

Mon 9/24/2018
AGEGAPDRIPSNO
PINATAREBAEON
UNCLIPJEOPARDY
ALESSOAPBOX
ALEXTREBEKTINE
FURYMRISMEATS
ESLCOINGAS
WHEELOFFORTUNE
FANFADEGED
STRIPQUIPSLAG
ARALVANNAWHITE
WEGETITTRIO
PATSAJAKESPIES
ITOLARANEPALI
TSPLYINTREMOR

Given the theme, I originally made this a pangram, but with answers that Will thought were too much for a Monday — ergo, a Z is nowhere to be found. It's funny — I'm usually told to redo a grid because it's not good enough; this time, I was told to dial it down because it was too good (I think?).

As far back as I can remember, I've always been a huge fan of Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune. I had both Nintendo games as a kid, and I would tune in to watch every night at 7 pm — a tradition I'm currently passing on to my son.

Once I realized how well the symmetry worked, I was honestly shocked that this theme had never appeared in an NY Times puzzle before. After all, Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune go hand-in-hand, airing back-to-back for the past 30+ years, so it seemed like such an up-for-grabs theme for an author to jump on. As such, I don't consider it a gameshow theme — the gameshow aspect is more of a subtext. The theme, I think, is more about how well these two shows complement each other. I mean seriously, can you think of one without thinking of the other?

I was very happy with the outcome because not only do the theme answers fit symmetrically, but their order is not forced or random. The shows and corresponding hosts group in a smooth, top-to-bottom pattern of show, host(s), show, host(s).

And here's the interesting kicker — crosswords incorporate the same aspects these gameshows do, from the clues on Jeopardy! to the blank spaces and letters on Wheel of Fortune. Kind of makes the theme all the more fitting — and makes sense as to why I could never like these shows without liking crosswords, and vice versa.

Note: Turns out that in certain parts of the country, Wheel of Fortune airs before Jeopardy! I never knew (or even thought about) that before constructing this puzzle. Ah, ya learn something new every day.

Tue 9/25/2018
USEDOMANIACTS
NUDERATONBARE
CBGBEATATSLAW
AWEMCMAHONVIA
SAIDOKWAKING
TYNANAMSSENSE
MAMMALIAN
MOVEBYNESOVER
APEAPSESAVA
NERVEOPPHOMER
UNTILERAADORE
BEEBHEPZOOM
MAXWELLANDERSON
AREROEDEERERE
ASSTARSALSDEW

Maybe this "protest puzz" is a little late to the game. I take the T to work here in Boston, and these days it seems the boorish commuter MAN SPREADS less than he KEEPS HIS BACKPACK ON in a crowded car. (Though it bears noting that there's a pretty healthy "would you like to sit down?" culture on the Red Line. Go, team!)

Also, the bizarre triple stack juxtaposition of AMY POEHLER / MAN SPREADS/ SLEEP APNEA felt like an acceptable trade-off for some 3-letter glue in the center.

Wed 9/26/2018
BFALOAFPASSBY
OILGAUGEESCALE
XXFACTORWARMUP
CARTERRESPIRE
ATEDEVILPARK
REDOCCSECTION
USSRALLMAE
JJCREWAALINE
AMYAAAONME
BBCOMPLEXEBBS
SALTECOLIROT
RATPACKOKFINE
ORDEALEEREADER
FIERCERADARGUN
FESSESDUESEPA

MELINDA: To understand how much of a thrill it is for me to co-author the New York Times crossword today, you should also know I'm a lifelong lover of puzzles. That's one of the things that first brought Bill and me together. When we were dating, I brought a more than 1,000-piece jigsaw puzzle of the Eiffel Tower to his house. I thought we'd do what my family used to do and leave it on the table for the next few months, occasionally adding a few pieces here and there. It turns out I overestimated our ability to walk away from a challenge. Bill and I finished that puzzle in a single weekend.

Over the years, I've come to realize that our shared love of puzzles is more than just a hobby. You might even say it's part of our worldview. I think there's a lot of value in throwing yourself into problems that seem daunting and reminding yourself that with time and effort, they, too, become doable. Find that one edge piece, and the whole bottom corner begins to arrange itself. Get that 1-Across hint, and the name of that Eagles song comes rushing back. You simply begin applying what you know until you wear away at the edges of the things you don't. In other words, you just start. And the more puzzles you solve, the more confidence you have to tackle the next one.

This crossword is full of answers that mean something to me: a former president who is also one of my heroes, the mascot of my alma mater, and, most important, a reminder of the dividends we reap when we invest in women and girls.

I hope it does what puzzles do best and gets you to look at challenges—even tough ones—not with resignation but with determination."

JOEL: The genesis of this puzzle is a Melinda Gates tweet in which she stated that "anyone who knows me knows I love puzzles". Naturally, that piqued our interest in including her in our celebrity crossword series. I jumped at the chance to be the one who got to collaborate with her, as I'm a huge admirer of the selfless work she does for the world.

We started by brainstorming themes based off of her various initiatives, which included one on women's empowerment titled "The XX Factor." Well, that got my constructor wordplay brain whirring, and I was able to generate some other puns in a similar vein, and we had our theme. For constructing the grid, I gave Melinda three or four options for potential fills in each corner, allowing her to pick and choose the words she connected with most. BLUE ROAN was an example of an entry I didn't know much about that Melinda loved, as equestrian is a big deal in her family. Finally, Melinda wrote most of the clues — and came up with some real gems, I should add. "Hoppy mediums" for ALES was my favorite of hers.

One final shoutout to Melinda's indispensable aide Beth Giudicessi, who helped immensely with putting this together. Hope solvers enjoy the final product!

POW Thu 9/27/2018
TIKIMEATSCIFI
ORALINCHTOGAS
FILLINTHEBLANKS
USEMISERYLIEU
MAOSEENTIE
ASSIGNSARMED
SHADESOFGRAY
SEGALEOSADR
INSIDETHEBOX
THREESEALEGS
HOEONCEELF
ALASSONATASPA
BETWEENTHELINES
IDEASDEARCARP
TORTSORBSEPPS

The Revenge of the Grid

I believe the art of the crossword puzzle will wither and die if we don't keep breaking it open to make it new again. I get bored if all I do is create variations on proven concepts. So, whether you liked this puzzle or not, I did it to explore something new, to break a few rules, and to take advantage of a platform (the NYT) that celebrates the idea of taking risks.

In this puzzle, I was intrigued by the idea of exploring whether the grid itself could provide its own theme clues. I like to think that if puzzle grids had personalities and could talk, some grids (extroverted types) would say they wanted to be more center stage, to participate in the same things that the clues always do.

"Hey, why do you words always get to give the clues? Why can't we grids ever do that!? It's always empty square, black square, empty square, black square…"

I like to think that my grid is smiling at the idea that its theme fill points back to the grid. The theme fill is, in a way, subordinated to the grid. When the grid lives ABOVE the fill, it's a good day in grid-dom.

When pondering this puzzle, I wondered how far I could go with the design. Would I have to do it using already-accepted methods? Would Will Shortz be interested? How much would I be allowed to challenge standard grid design? My first draft even included CLUELESS in the fill, clued as "How one might feel trying to solve 17-, 33-, 42-, and 62-Across". In the end, Will advised that the CLUELESS entry was not necessary. The puzzle's grid would speak for itself. He got the point I was trying to make even more than I did.

Fri 9/28/2018
CHRISSYARAPAHO
HOECAKELUNULAR
ENDEDITMETGALA
MEDIANRADISSON
LYINCEYKEG
APTDUOSCCLASS
BOOTYLICIOUS
TRUSTFUNDBABY
NORSEDEITIES
MTDANADISCKAT
EVEPOEBEHR
TECHBLOGAGASSI
EXITROWSMASHUP
REDTIDEGOTSORE
SCEPTERTROOPED
Sat 9/29/2018
KNITCAPTSPSPY
NOSHADEIPADPRO
ENTERINRITEAID
ECHELONENHANCE
SEAMOSSSNORKEL
TETASS
STARSTRUCKIHOP
HOLAROGUEROVE
YELLOTHERWOMAN
DAYERE
CASINOSBIOMASS
OPTSOUTODWALLA
PRALINETANDOOR
SILENCECHIANTI
ELKTEDHOTMESS

I started this puzzle in the lower right. I'd just scored all the 7-letter entries in my word list, so I decided to see how lively a 7x5 "mini-grid" I could make just for fun.

I soon found a stack of five 7-letter entries I really liked and was all set to move on to serious puzzles when I noticed that OWN IT, MADAM, and ALONE could all expand into interesting longer entries. And so this puzzle was born, complete with its nontraditional grid pattern forced by DEAR SIR OR MADAM and the quint-stack of 7s.

As luck would have it, I quickly found smooth fills for the upper right and lower left. The upper left put me through the wringer, though with just NONCE and PENN'S in the "entries I wouldn't normally use" category, I called it a day.

Sun 9/30/2018 SLEEP ON IT
BANGRIDSMAVSEMIRS
ADORISENALOULANAI
RIBECOCARROLLWITHIT
BELLEFAKESETTHETONE
QUEENOFMEANRAYRUGS
SPRPOLEHONPESO
WONCOBIMAFANDOSED
ENEEMAILRODAILS
LEIAELLASEASOYFOB
FULLBODIEDFAIRSHAKE
APPLSCAPEXENACITED
RORSCHACHTWINSISTER
ENTHIPEPICSPKSAFE
PODSSDSMERITIFS
THROEMUFASASPALET
ROILSOSANNEBLT
SAWNCUBKINGSOLOMON
HITCOUNTERPHENBOOZE
INREALTIMETESOROPOM
ROUSTZETAITGUYUNE
TRESSUSSRMASTSPEA
XWord Info Home
XWord Info © 2007-2024, Jim Horne
155 ms