THEME: "Linkletter Art" - black squares form a giant "H" in the middle of the puzzle, and multiple answers traverse said "H" at various points, picking it up as a letter along the way. For example, 13D: Ancient (OLDAST) has just six squares before it runs into the NE corner of the black "H," and OLDAST would seem to make no sense ... but the answer extends through the "H" to 97D: - (EHILLS), which has no clue, just a dash, because it's just an extension of 13D. So 13D's OLDAST becomes OLDAST[H]EHILLS. I'm sure there is a more concise way to explain this.
*The solving time has an asterisk because I solved this puzzle under atypical circumstances. For the first time since I began RPDTNYTCP, I completed the puzzle the evening before its stated release date, during hours when Rex is normally sleeping or reading comics in bed. Rex is a morning person - his brain is freshest from about 6am to noon, then it's serviceable from noon to about 5pm, and then it wants only food and Battlestar Galactica
The Tigers lost last night, about which I have nothing to say. Yet.
Last thing before puzzlemania: I saw Elizabeth Edwards discussing her new book on handling grief last night on what looked like the Charlie Rose Show, only the host was somehow Tim Russert. I was completely spell-bound by her discussion of her son's death - so graceful, subdued, eloquent, warm, plain-spoken; it was an incredibly touching tribute to her son. I was most impressed with the eloquence: the fluency of her speech, the directness, the sincerity that had absolutely nothing platitudinous or Hallmarkian about it. What really knocked me over, however, was when she described finding on-line usenet groups to help her deal with her initial grief - she said that she had a passing familiarity with such groups before her son's death, having previously gotten on-line to argue matters of grammar and language usage! I was a little in love at that moment, frankly, and it's possible that I started pleading with the screen "Will you please be my First Lady?" [a desire that has little to do with politics and everything to do with her warmth, generosity, and sexy love of grammar]
Look out, it's a Giant "H"!
52A (THEME): Utilizes fully (MAKEST)
53A (THEME): - (EMOSTOF)
The point at which I discovered the puzzle's theme. I thought for sure that 52A was MAXES ... OUT? Maybe this was a rebus-type puzzle and OUT was going to be crammed into individual squares throughOUT? But 38D: Tip of Manhattan (Battery Park) was surely right, so what the hell was MAXEST? Changing to X to the proper K didn't help. It wasn't til I was working on the Other side of the big, bad "H" (at 53A, where I had an answer that seemed to have something to do with either comedian EMO Phillips or contemporary music genre EMO, that I took a bird's-eye view of the puzzle and saw the "H"-traversing phrase just waiting to come out of hiding: MAKES T[H]E MOST OF. I wish I could say getting the theme sped things up. It didn't.
8D: "Haven't Got Time for the Pain" singer, 1974 (Carly Simon)
57A: _____ Brazzi, star of "South Pacific" (Rossano)
102D: Howe who wrote "Pride's Crossing" (Tina)
Now, the "San Luis Obispo" portion of the puzzle, where I had a humiliating FOUR squares wrongly filled.
81A: Bilingual Muppet (Rosita)
89A (THEME): Soldier's accessory of old (powder)
90A (THEME): - (orn)
If only I could have come up with this relatively simple answer, everything would have been OK. I had EIGHT letters: _ O _ DER[H]ORN!!!! And yet all I could come up with was FODDERHORN - thinking of cannon fodder, and fodder must be another name for gun powder (if I had stopped my brain right there, I'd have been home free), etc. In desperation I had SOLDERHORN, SODDERHORN (?) and MADDERHORN (!?!?) in there at various points. The two crosses that I lacked, in retrospect, are also relatively easy. 81D: Bit of sch. writing (rpt.) seems clear enough, but I just had the T, and I could think only of "essay" or "theme" as a possible pre-abbreviated answer. Then I thought the horrible "sch." might mean "scholarly," so I had INT (for "introduction") and AFT (for "afterword") in there. The real killer, though, was 83D: Halmstad's locale: Abbr. (Swe.), because if I'd just slowed down and gone methodically through $%^#$-ing Europe, I would have figured this out. Instead the ONLY answers that wanted to go here were abbreviations for the former East Germany: DDR and GDR. I blame friend and historian of post-war Germany Kathy Pence for making East Germany loom overly large in my consciousness. She would foist tons of images of German women shopping on me during the long, wasted days of graduate school - in between rounds of Boggle and the Charlie's Angels board game.
2D: Huxtable boy, on "The Cosby Show" (Theo)
48D: Diamond cutter? (Sosa)
Help me out. I know "diamond" refers to baseball, but "cutter?" Is he secretly a depressed Goth kid who marks himself up with razors in his bedroom late at night instead of telling his mom how much he hates her?
43A: Emma player in "The Avengers" (Uma)
60A: "Citizen X" star, 1995 (Rea)
These are both PANTHEON names, and because they are actors with scores of movie credits to their ... uh, credit, you can clue them up and down, back and forth, Monday to Saturday, from here to eternity. What the hell was "Citizen X?"
109D: Hall-of-Fame catcher Carlton (Fisk)
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
Darling Rex,
ReplyDeleteIt's not "spell-bound", but "spellbound".
Love your work.
Keep going.
Dear Rex,
ReplyDeleteHow can Nana be "inedible" to you? Aren't you supposed to LISTEN to her?
Just wondering.
Dear anonymice,
ReplyDeleteFirst off, I'm keeping the hyphen in "spell-bound," despite no immediate Google-hits to back me up. Bound by a spell. Spell-bound. Like hell-bound. Which means "bound FOR Hell," so it's different. But still.
And second, re: "inedible," it's called synesthesia (or it's a close relative of synesthesia, at any rate). It's a reviewing convention, of sorts. As when someone's theatrical performance "stinks."
But you knew that.
Love, Rex
PS anyone addressing me as "Darling Rex" is clearly my mother. Hi mom.
ReplyDeleteI think I'd remember if I were your mother.
ReplyDeleteAnd if you can't get any authority to agree with spell HYPHEN bound instead of spellbound, why won't you just give it up? Think hidebound and go from there.
Hidebound slave to proper spelling,
Not Your Mother
O Not My Mother, don't be cross (like my mother). I admit to your technical correctness. Think of the hyphen - as well as my stubbornly persisting in my wrongness - as a curious (if not lovable) eccentricity.
ReplyDeleteYou may continue to address me as "Darling," though. I like that.
Thanks for reading (I do mean that),
RP
"Inedible" stinks. So there.
ReplyDeleteGod, I love your work, Rex.
ReplyDeleteHey Rex. Recently signed up for the iPad app and decided to puzzle along with your blogs archive. Best guess for diamond cutter is that a swing is slangily referred to as a cut, ergo Sosa, not known for his outfielding prowess, is a diamond cutter?
ReplyDeleteHi Rex. I recently signed up for the iPad app and I'm now puzzling through the blog archive. I think diamond cutter is referring to baseball slangs use of the word cut to describe a swing. Enjoying your evolution as a critical voice!
ReplyDeleteI love doing the archive puzzles and then seeing what you had to say about them.
ReplyDeleteThis post touched me because of your comments about Elizabeth Edwards. I met her at a book signing at Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh NC. She showed up in slacks and a kind of ratty sweater with her hair a little messy. Immediately put everyone at ease because she just looked like one of us.
She spoke beautifully and straight from the heart. And took the time to really talk to each person whose book she signed. I still cherish that signed copy.