Relative difficulty: Easy (solved Downs-only)
THEME: "ARE YOU CHICKEN?" (55A: Question to a scaredy-cat ... to which the final parts of 20-, 32- and 42-Across would answer "Yes!") — chicken formats:
Theme answers:
- LAS VEGAS STRIP (20A: Main drag through Sin City)
- GOLD NUGGET (32A: Valuable bit in a prospector's pan)
- GOALTENDER (42A: Hockey player who typically plays the entire game)
Sadie Jones (born 1967) is an English writer and novelist best known for her award-winning debut novel, The Outcast (2008). [...] The Outcast was short-listed for the 2008 Orange Prize. It was a Sunday Times Number 1 Bestseller and won the Best First Novel in the Costa Book Awards of 2008. It has been translated into twelve languages and sold more than 500,000 copies. [...] The Outcast is the debut novel by British author Sadie Jones, published in 2007 by Chatto & Windus. In 2008, it won the Costa Book Award for First Novel and was shortlisted for the 2008 Women's Prize for Fiction. In 2015, it was adapted for television.
• • •
Otherwise the grid is AWASH in short stuff (as often happens with 78-worders—the maximum allowable word count). Most of it is, like many molded and fried chicken products, merely bland, not particularly offensive. The one thing the grid has going for it is a sizable assortment of longer Down answers. They really give the grid some much-needed color today. You get six really solid 7+-letter answers. There's not a one I don't actively like. Solving Downs-only, I had a little "ooh, nice" moment when I figured out my first long Down, DIVVIED UP. There's something about the double-"V" of DIVVIED that is inherently appealing.
Bullets:
- 42D: Period before starting more school (GAP YEAR) — a solid 7. SHOTPUT too (8D: Track-and-field event with a 16-pound ball). It's always nice when there's a lot of longer non-thematic stuff and it's strong.
- 53D: Outdoor John? (DEERE) — because John DEERE makes farming equipment, which you use ... outdoors. Yeah, that must be it. My first thought for [Outdoor John?], which I still like best despite its making no sense: ELTON. He did do a few famous "outdoor" concerts.
- 56D: Oceanic predator (ORCA) — the one bit of "crosswordese" that I never get tired of. Love ORCAs. More ORCAs. Any time I hear about ORCAs "attacking" yachts or other watercraft (as has happened many times off the coast of France and the Iberian Peninsula in recent years), I think "good for them." I mean, I hope no humans are hurt, but any time animals show utter disrespect for human property, I feel a certain respect. It's their world. And it's not like we've respected that world, exactly. So ... if they want to toss our luxury vessels around like a hackysack, so be it. I like this cetologist's measured, existential perspective on the boat destruction—the ORCAs aren't "attacking," they're merely "interacting" with the vessels as part of their educational "enrichment." Because the sea is "a very boring place":
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| [from USA Today, 9/17/25] |
That's all for today. See you next time.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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Cute early week puzzle - well developed theme and clean revealer. The big guy summarizes most of the highlights. STRIP - TENDER - NUGGET all fit together nicely.
ReplyDeleteRAGS to Riches
CLIP BOARD is a little pedestrian but the other long downs shine - I like LOST CAUSE. Glue is at a minimum although we get ultimate crosswardese with EWER and ORCA.
I Wanna Be ADORED
Enjoyable but frigid Monday morning solve.
Innocence Mission
My five favorite original clues from last week
ReplyDelete(in order of appearance):
1. Ruler's length? (5)
2. Mistake "air" for "heir," say (3)
3. Case of emergency? (3)(4)
4. Crime ring, for short? (3)
5. Reds' fandom? (10)
REIGN
ERR
ALL CAPS
APB
OENOPHILIA
My favorite encore clues from last week:
Delete[Not fair, in a way] (7)
[More ideal?] (6)
RAINING
UTOPIA
I believe @rex’s missed a classic chicken reference from our youth
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/tM4044bh4FU?si=Wimr8o7MQuHrlDze
Easy and fun. I love the idea of ORCAs “playing” with fancy yachts in the ocean rather than being mean killers. I also really like DIVVIEDUP, a phrase my mother used to use a lot. And now I want to read “The Outcast” , which I’ve never heard of.
ReplyDeleteI was sure that “Outdoor John” should be something along the lines of outhouse or port-a-potty, but should have realized that with a capital J that wasn’t the idea.
I suppose [_______ Hawkins Day] would be just as obscure as the novelist Jones for the younger set.
ReplyDeleteNever saw that clue for SADIE but if I had, I'd be complaining about the Monday-worthiness of that clue.
ReplyDeleteBut there are probably a lot of clues I never saw, as this was AGAIN pre-Monday easy.
ARE YOU CHICKEN feels like needs a 'what' at the beginning. Or better, 'whatta' in stead of 'what are'.
Sweetwater the other day and now Georgia TECH, I feel seen in my midtown Atlanta home.
ReplyDeleteMatthew mentioned in his notes that his grids often include a host of food-related entries, and yes – aside from the theme answers, there’s GRAVY, DIET, ICEES, ATE, GORGE and ORDER (as clued).
ReplyDeleteThis was a Monday made by a pro:
• Only a few answers that newer solvers may not have run across before and all those are easily crossed.
• All the longs are lovely – every theme answer plus the four long downs LOST CAUSE, DIVVIED UP, HONOR CODE, and CLIPBOARD.
• The popping-fresh theme, with all its answers aside from GOALTENDER being NYT debuts.
Plus, some sweet serendipities. YUM crossing RUM, the high-volume cross of LOL and YELL, the PuzzPair©️ of I'M OUT and SCAB, and even a rare-in-crosswords five-letter semordnilap (NONET). I also liked all the OR sounds – OAR, GORGE, ADORE, ORC, CLIPBOARD, and ORDER.
I enjoyed guessing at the revealer, not to mention the feeling throughout that I was coursing through quality. Excellent one, Matthew, and thank you!
Rex, a chicken TENDER (short for tenderloin) is the small strip of white meat below the breast. Many chefs remove them when deboning chicken breasts and will prepare them separately. And yes, they are tender and a far cry from the processed chicken nuggets that you remember.
ReplyDeleteNo real trouble spots obviously as it’s a pretty easy grid even for a Monday. I got the British author and the Spanish cat from the crosses. I tried to guess what the reveal would be, but couldn’t quite get there. Still an enjoyable start to the day.
100% team orca!
ReplyDeletenice easy puzzle for a monday morning.
Pretty junky, by my count; 20 three-letter words and 21 four-letter words (of which three were 3-letters plus a pluralizing s).
ReplyDeleteBut I liked it more after reading Rex's write-up. The faux chicken that gets formed into strips and nuggets (not tenders, as SS Johnny points out) is the result of liquification in processing. Enjoy your breakfast (sorry). The good news is that some (can't attest to "most" and certainly not "all") school meal programs are turning away from this junk in favor of real chicken. But then kids order McNuggets.
Loved Rex's riff on crossword friend ORCA, which always makes me think of the movie Free Willy, which my kids watched and re-watched, about a captive orca. It was cute.
Lovely Monday puzzle. DIVVy and DIVVIED were BEE words a few days ago. There were so many UPs yesterday that they spilled over to today-DIVVIEDUP. I even thought there were two because I had HoldUP before HICCUP. Always nice to see EWER. I miss newel, adit, and oriel.
ReplyDeleteSHOTPUT reminded me of when I tried out for track & field in college. The only spot I qualified for was javelin catcher.
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDelete"I'm not a chicken!"
"Then prove it."
Then you do something dumb because of pride and peer pressure. Ah, youth.
Nice MonPuz. Slightly quicker than my average. But still a nice solve.
Liked the puz. Who'da thunk you can have a puz about chicken? LOL.
Couple of stabs at some ©Uniclues:
Mountain top resident takes a sabbatical?
GURU GAPYEAR
Cobbled together tenet?
DIVVIED UP CREED
Extreme nosher downs some green?
ATE LARGE DEERE
We'll now return you to the original (and better) Unicluer @Gary. 😁
Hope you have a HICCUP free Monday!
No F's - YELLing ARE YOU CHICKEN to use them? Har.
RooMonster
DarrinV
Telegram from Yosarian:
ReplyDeleteNOWIN NOWIN sitch. IMOUT.
How would you characterize a group of nine aerialists who will die if they fall? A NONET NONET.
Whenever you have a clue containing "science" and "TV" you know that Bill is NYE.
I would have liked it better if the revealer clue had been [Question to a bucket of KFC ], but I'm just wingin' it. Thanks, Matthew (CHICKEN) Stock.
MASSIVE and LARGE are synonymous in popular usage but not at all synonymous in their actual meaning. So it seems like 26D clue needs a “colloquially”
ReplyDeleteLooked at this as just another easy puzzle with a half-way decent theme until I read Rex’s take that it was a person talking to his food …that made me laugh!
ReplyDeleteToo easy but a lot of fun.🎈🎈🎊🎊
ReplyDeleteBetter than usual Monday. Theme worked well one great thing about The New Yorker is that their hardest puzzle is on Monday. Let’s go.
ReplyDelete"The hard part about playing chicken is knowin' when to flinch".
ReplyDelete"What are you, chicken?" I think is what we would say.
ReplyDeleteI don't know when deformed chicken pieces (as Rex might put it) became part of the food chain but they weren't around in my childhood home. I don't think I missed anything.
ReplyDeleteThis was an easy puzzles, well under my usual Monday average but that's okay. Only GOALkeepER, GOALmiNDER, GOALTENDER gave me any trouble.
Thanks, Matthew Stock!
I got John DEERE but am i the only one who had to check themselves on EWER?
ReplyDeleteCute & easy except I didn't know SADIE.
ReplyDeleteAlternate clue for 13A: Patriot's report.
ReplyDeleteI loved the theme, especially the revealer. I knew it was CHICKEN after the first two themers, but no idea what the revealer would be. The wording didn't bother me.
ReplyDeleteI liked the polarity of ATAD crossing AWASH, and the GOA/GOAL crossing.
Really easy, though. I mean, cluing NONET as "Nine-member musical group?""
I, too, grew up with no nuggets or strips; I don't think we had tenders, either. But we did have maps that showed a country named "Muscat and OMAN." I guess they had a name change. Maybe I'll look it up after I watch Bad Bunny's show from last night.
This was a top notch Monday puzzle!! Bravo
ReplyDeleteMIA for several days now: Star Wars clues!
ReplyDeleteAnybody notice at 47 across that "hiatus" and "hiccup" have the same number of letters? And I think 4 down should have indicated slang in the clue. Otherwise I'm with OFL.
ReplyDeleteDefinition of somebody with absolutely nothing better to do: someone who takes the time to declare the Monday NYT x-word puzzle "easy."
ReplyDeleteAnd I guess you could include somebody who takes the time to comment about it.
Easy. SADIE was it for WOEs and no erasures.
ReplyDeleteSmooth and amusing with some nice long downs, liked it.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1086 was pretty easy for a Croce or about 2.5 X last Monday’s New Yorker. Good luck!
Easy for a Monday. But well constructed. And a very fair question it is (ARE YOU CHICKEN?) that some of these chicken constructions, or chicken deformations, might elicit. Those Chicken McNUGGETs could be just about anything, up to and including various oddments from chickens. (GOLD those things are not.)
ReplyDeleteGetting back to the question: ARE YOU CHICKEN? Answer: not always, but I feel like CHICKEN tonight.
Agree with Rex that the longer downs are very solid. I also like DIVVIED. (So does Sam Ezersky.)
I was sitting around this morning at a car repair shop, waiting for the simple car fix to be completed, and bored silly. Leafed through a People Magazine in the most desultory manner possible, and then I get to the last page where it's the People crossword, lots of three- and four-letter entries, and Tracy Morgan clued by a photograph of his face. You've seen that sort of crossword, I'm sure. I glance at the bottom of the page, and whose name should I see but that of Robyn Weintraub! It made me think of the Flintstones' kitchen bird who is accomplished no doubt, but is assigned menial tasks like opening cans with its beak, and who comments on that by saying, "Rawk! It's a living!" Yes, I suppose it is, Robyn. And I can feel that.
Have a good Monday, all!
My second (relatively) early Monday solve. I'm liking this little new tradition of mine.
ReplyDeleteThis was a lovely, easy Monday. An absolutely adorable theme with a solid revealer and long themers that all land beautifully.
As @Rex said, all the long non-theme downs were top notch - this really gave an easy solve some added punch.
I liked learning about SADIE and I love answers like NOWIN. It all came with the crosses so I barely looked at the clue, so when I have to really stare at something with a "what the heck is that?" look, and then realize I need to read it as *two* words, that is a fun moment for me. Same thing happened this past Saturday with GENUSANDSPECIES...
Mark - thank you for a great start to the week.
And now for my second ever Monday Haiku, please keep scrolling if you have not interest... again, I have no other outlet for this little hobby :o) :
Puzzles black and white
Monochrome, a steady hand
Rainbow of deep thoughts
This was right here!https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7M6Tgf5Nsik
ReplyDelete[Be available on short notice]
ReplyDeleteWAIT IN THE WINGS